Tumor suppression after tumor cell-targeted tumor necrosis factor alpha gene transfer.

T Blankenstein, ZH Qin, K Uberla, W Müller… - The Journal of …, 1991 - rupress.org
T Blankenstein, ZH Qin, K Uberla, W Müller, H Rosen, HD Volk, T Diamantstein
The Journal of experimental medicine, 1991rupress.org
The tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) gene was introduced by retroviral gene transfer
into the TNF-alpha-insensitive tumor cell line J558L. Production of 40 pg/ml TNF-alpha by
clone J2T12 consistently did not change the growth rate in vitro, but drastically suppressed
tumor growth when injected into syngeneic BALB/c mice. Within 2 wk, 90% of the mice
inoculated with J558L cells developed a tumor, but none of the mice injected with J2T12 did
so. Within the observation period (greater than 3 mo), 60% of the mice inoculated with J2T12 …
The tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) gene was introduced by retroviral gene transfer into the TNF-alpha-insensitive tumor cell line J558L. Production of 40 pg/ml TNF-alpha by clone J2T12 consistently did not change the growth rate in vitro, but drastically suppressed tumor growth when injected into syngeneic BALB/c mice. Within 2 wk, 90% of the mice inoculated with J558L cells developed a tumor, but none of the mice injected with J2T12 did so. Within the observation period (greater than 3 mo), 60% of the mice inoculated with J2T12 did not develop a tumor. In the other 40% of the mice, tumor manifestation was significantly delayed. Mice injected simultaneously with J2T12 cells and an anti-TNF-alpha monoclonal antibody developed tumors similar to parental J558L cells. Similarly, the tumor-suppressive effects of TNF-alpha were abolished, e.g., by injection of an anti-type 3 complement receptor (CR3) monoclonal antibody that is known to prevent migration of inflammatory cells. These results and the observation of tumor-infiltrating macrophages suggest that lack of tumorigenicity of J2T12 cells is due to the TNF-alpha secretion by the tumor cells and that TNF-alpha acts indirectly by a mechanism that involves chemotactic recruitment and activation of cells, predominantly of macrophages. In contrast, the tumor growth was not affected when, instead of TNF-alpha, interleukin 6 was expressed by J558L cells. Together, our results support the concept of tumor cell-targeted cytokine gene transfer as a tool for cancer treatment, and particularly demonstrate that extremely low doses of TNF-alpha produced by tumor cells are sufficient to inhibit tumor growth without detectable side effects.
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