CD95 Ligand-Expressing Tumors Are Rejected in Anti-Tumor TCR Transgenic Perforin Knockout Mice
Author(s) -
Christian K. Behrens,
Frederik H. Igney,
Bernd Arnold,
Peter Möller,
Peter H. Krammer
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
the journal of immunology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1550-6606
pISSN - 0022-1767
DOI - 10.4049/jimmunol.166.5.3240
Subject(s) - perforin , fas receptor , cytotoxic t cell , apoptosis , tumor necrosis factor alpha , fas ligand , cancer research , biology , immune system , genetically modified mouse , microbiology and biotechnology , transgene , programmed cell death , immunology , cd8 , in vitro , biochemistry , gene
CD95 (APO-/Fas) ligand (CD95L) is a member of the TNF family predominantly expressed by activated T and NK cells but also by tumors of diverse cellular origin. CD95L trimerizes surface CD95 expressed by target cells that subsequently undergo apoptosis. The role of the CD95/CD95L system in the down-regulation of an immune response (activation-induced cell death) is established. However, it is so far unclear why tumors express CD95L. To investigate whether tumors use the CD95L to down-regulate an anti-tumor immune response, we established a transgenic (tg) mouse model consisting of 1) apoptosis-resistant tumor cells, designated LKC-CD95L, which express functional CD95L and the model tumor Ag K(b); and 2) perforin knockout (PKO) anti-K(b) TCR tg mice. L1210-Fas antisense expressing K(b), crmA, and CD95L (LKC-CD95L) killed CD95(+) unrelated tumor targets and Con A-activated splenocytes from anti-K(b) TCR tg PKO mice by a CD95L-dependent mechanism in vitro. However, we could not detect any cytotoxic activity against anti-tumor (anti-K(b)) T cells in vivo. We also observed reduced growth of LKC-CD95L in nude mice and rapid rejection in anti-K(b) TCR tg PKO mice. Because the tumor cells are resistant to CD95L-, TNF-alpha-, and TNF-related apoptosis-inducing ligand-induced apoptosis and the mice used are perforin-deficient, the involvement of these four cytotoxicity mechanisms in tumor rejection can be excluded. The histological examination of tumors grown in nude mice showed infiltration of LKC-CD95L tumors by neutrophils, whereas L1210-Fas antisense expressing K(b) and crmA (LKC) tumor tissue was neutrophil-free. Chemotaxis experiments revealed that CD95L has no direct neutrophil-attractive activity. Therefore, we conclude that LKC-CD95L cells used an indirect mechanism to attract neutrophils that may cause tumor rejection.
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