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Abstract

Critical issues for cytotoxic lymphocyte (CTL) cross-priming are (a) the maturation state of dendritic cells (DC), (b) the source of the tumor-associated antigens (TAA) and (c) the context in which they are delivered to DCs. Drug-induced apoptosis has recently been implicated in CTL cross-priming. However, since drug-treatment produces in vivo more tumor cells than the DC default apoptotic clearance program can cope with, they are expected to proceed to secondary necrosis and change their molecular pattern. Here we have addressed this issue on renal carcinoma cells (RCC) by using different apoptotic stimuli. UVC, but not γ-irradiation or anthracyclins, induced after 4h treatment of the RCC cell line K1 a combination of apoptotic (phosphatydilserine and calreticulin plasma membrane mobilization) and necrotic (membrane incompetence) features. Heat shock protein (Hsp)-70 and chromatin-bound high mobility box 1 HMGB1 protein, typical of necrosis, were released during the further 20h and thus made accessible to co-cultured monocyte-derived immature (i) DC. UVC-treated, secondary necrotic RCC cell lines were cross-presented with higher efficiency by cytokine-matured (m) DC than their early apoptotic (i.e. γ-irradiated) counterpart. Upstream events such as increased tumor uptake, activation of genes involved in the antigen-processing machinery, and increased expression of costimulatory and maturation molecules were also observed after loadingiDC with secondary necrotic, but not apoptotic, tumor cells. These data offer a description of the molecular and immunogenic characteristics of post-apoptotic tumors which can be exploited to increase the efficiency of in vivo and ex vivo TAA delivery to the DC cross-presentation pathway.

Details

Title
Post-apoptotic tumors are more palatable to dendritic cells and enhance their antigen cross-presentation activity
Author
Brusa, Davide; Garetto, Stefano; Chiorino, Giovan na; Scatolini, Maria; Migliore, Elisa; Camussi, Giovan ni; Matera, Lina
Pages
6422-6432
Publication year
2008
Publication date
Nov 25, 2008
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
0264410X
e-ISSN
18732518
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1547167566
Copyright
Copyright Elsevier Limited Nov 25, 2008