Tumor Regression and Autoimmunity after Reversal of a Functionally Tolerant State of Self-reactive CD8+ T Cells
National Institutes of Health · The Netherlands Cancer Institute · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Many tumor-associated antigens are derived from nonmutated "self" proteins. T cells infiltrating tumor deposits recognize self-antigens presented by tumor cells and can be expanded in vivo with vaccination. These T cells exist in a functionally tolerant state, as they rarely result in tumor eradication. We found that tumor growth and lethality were unchanged in mice even after adoptive transfer of large numbers of T cells specific for an MHC class I-restricted epitope of the self/tumor antigen gp100. We sought to develop new strategies that would reverse the functionally tolerant state of self/tumor antigen-reactive T cells and enable the destruction of large (with products of perpendicular diameters of >50…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 15.25
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 53
Authors
18- WWWillem W. OverwijkCorresponding
National Institutes of Health, The Netherlands Cancer Institute, National Cancer Institute
- MRMarc R. Theoret
National Institutes of Health, Howard Hughes Medical Institute
- SESteven E. Finkelstein
National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute
- DRDeborah R. Surman
National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute
- LALaurina A. de Jong
The Netherlands Cancer Institute
Topics & keywords
- Adoptive cell transfer
- Antigen
- Cytotoxic T cell
- Immunology
- Epitope
- CD8
- Biology
- Major histocompatibility complex
- Good health and well-being