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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 
 
 

Adoptive tumor therapy with T lymphocytes enriched through an IFN-gamma capture assay.

Successful adoptive T-cell therapy has been demonstrated in viral disease and selected forms of cancer. However, it is limited by the difficulty to efficiently isolate and amplify autologous tumor-reactive T-cell clones. Tetramers of major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I and peptide have facilitated the characterization of CD8+ T cells specific for tumor-associated antigens. However, for adoptive T-cell therapy, MHC-tetramers have limitations: they require knowledge of tumor antigens, which is often not available; they select T cells with a single specificity, thereby posing risk for selection of tumor escape variants; they do not select for function, so that T cells may be anergic when isolated from cancer patients; and they do not allow the isolation of CD4+ T cells that can be essential for tumor rejection. Because interferon (IFN)-gamma is essential for tumor rejection, we isolated live T cells based on their IFN-gamma production. IFN-gamma secreted by previously activated T cells is retained on the cell surface, allowing their specific isolation and expansion. We show here that IFN-gamma+ but not IFN-gamma- T cells from tumor-immunized mice are cytolytic and mediate tumor rejection upon adoptive transfer. Importantly, tumor-specific T cells can be enriched from lymphocytes infiltrating human renal cell carcinoma by the IFN-gamma capture assay.[1]

References

  1. Adoptive tumor therapy with T lymphocytes enriched through an IFN-gamma capture assay. Becker, C., Pohla, H., Frankenberger, B., Schüler, T., Assenmacher, M., Schendel, D.J., Blankenstein, T. Nat. Med. (2001) [Pubmed]
 
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