WO1999000137A2 - Induction of an activated myeloid dendritic cell phenotype - Google Patents
Induction of an activated myeloid dendritic cell phenotype Download PDFInfo
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- WO1999000137A2 WO1999000137A2 PCT/US1998/013542 US9813542W WO9900137A2 WO 1999000137 A2 WO1999000137 A2 WO 1999000137A2 US 9813542 W US9813542 W US 9813542W WO 9900137 A2 WO9900137 A2 WO 9900137A2
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Definitions
- Antigen presenting cells are naturally occurring cells whose function is to present both "self” and
- Antigen-pulsed APCs have traditionally been prepared in one of two ways:
- APCs Damani, A. et al. 1994 J. Immunol. 153:996-1003); or (2) APCs are incubated with whole proteins or protein particles which are then ingested by the APCs. These proteins are digested into small peptide fragments by the APC and eventually carried to and presented on the APC surface (Cohen, PA et al. 1994 Cancer Res. 54:1055-1058).
- APCs are prepared by one of the above methods, they can be injected back into a patient as a "vaccine,” eventually reaching locations such as lymph nodes where they present the desired antigen to T lymphocytes (Inaba, K. et al. 1990 J. Exp. Med. 172:631-640 1990 [published erratum appears in J. Exp. Med. 1990 172(41:1275]).
- T lymphocytes are removed from a patient and stimulated to grow in culture by contact with the APCs (Cohen, PA et al. 1993 J. Immunother. 14:242-252).
- An effective APC has several important properties: (1) it retains the peptide antigen on its cell surface long enough to present it to T lymphocytes; (2) it should process (ingest and digest) whole proteins or particles into peptide fragments as described above; (3) it can be activated to express additional "costimulatory” and adhesion molecules on its surface membrane which help T lymphocytes respond appropriately after encountering antigen on the APC surface. Because effective antigen presentation requires a complicated system of cellular signals, researchers have concentrated on collecting human cells whose primary natural function is antigen processing and presentation.
- DC dendritic cell
- DCs are derived from "myeloid precursor” cells in the bone marrow which also give rise to monocytes and macrophages (Thomas, R. et al. 1994 J. Immunol. 153:4016-4028). It is also possible that monocytes themselves serve in vivo as immediate precursors to dendritic cells and macrophages. As support for this theory, researchers have found that monocytes are capable of developing into cells morphologically and immunophenotypically identical to either DCs or macrophages in culture. This finding indicates that lymphocytes which share the same bone marrow precursor are relatively uncommitted to a particular differentiation pathway for at least some portion of their development (Peters, JH et al.
- DCs are derived from the bone marrow, they must travel through the blood until they reach their destination organs. These target organs include virtually every organ in the body. Due to this essential transit through the blood, the blood itself is the richest available source of DCs in the human body. It has been estimated that 1-3% of all mono ⁇ uclear blood cells are precommitted DCs (Thomas, R. et al. 1993 J. Immunol. 151:6840- 6852). The 10-15% of peripheral blood mononuclear cells which are monocytes, and which are typically present in ten fold greater numbers than dendritic cells, may also, at least in part, have the potential to differentiate into DCs (Peters, JH et al. 1991 Pathobiology 59:122-126).
- the second approach for isolating DCs is to collect the relatively large numbers of precommitted DCs already circulating in the blood.
- Previous techniques for preparing mature DCs from human peripheral blood have involved combinations of physical procedures such as metrizamide gradients and adherence/nonadherence steps (Freudenthal, PS et al. 1990 Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. 87:7698-7702); Percoll gradient separations (Mehta-Damani, et al. 1994 J. Immunol.
- CCE countercurrent centrifugal elutriation
- CCE separates cells by their size. Cell fractions were taken from the elutriation rotor at specific buffer flow rates, while the rotor spins at a constant rate. During the procedure, the buffer is constantly increasing in flow rate.
- a "140" fraction (traditional lymphocyte fraction) was collected and used as a source of lymphocytes. This fraction was elutriated at a buffer flow rate of 140 cc/min.
- This fraction was collected by eluting the cells remaining in the initial sample after the rotor has stopped.
- each fraction was either utilized immediately or cryopreserved in 10% DMSO so it could be stored and thawed for use at later times.
- elutriation per se did not result in marked enrichment for dendritic cells.
- FACS fluorescent activator cell sorting
- the present invention relates to a method of increasing the antigen presenting ability of monocytes comprising contacting the monocytes with an agent which elevates the intracellular calcium concentration to a level sufficient to increase said antigen presenting ability.
- the agent comprises a calcium ionophore.
- the monocyte downregulates CD 14, upregulates B7.2, and expresses CD83 de novo.
- the monocyte also expresses B7.1 de novo.
- the downregulation of CD 14, upregulation of B7.2, and de novo expression of CD83 occur within 18 hours of calcium ionophore treatment.
- the agent elevates the intracellular calcium level by blocking the export of calcium out of the cytoplasm.
- the agent comprises adenovirus.
- the calcium ionophore is selected from the group consisting of A23187 and ionomyci ⁇ .
- the agent activates the calcineurin pathway.
- the method further comprises the step of obtaining peripheral blood mononuclear cells from a subject, wherein the peripheral blood mononuclear cells comprise monocytes and other mononuclear cells.
- the method further comprises the step of enriching the peripheral blood mononuclear cells for monocytes.
- the step of obtaining peripheral blood mononuclear cells comprises drawing the blood in a syringe, layering the blood on Ficoll Hypaque, centrifuging the Ficoll Hypaque, and collecting the peripheral blood mononuclear cells at an interface of said Ficoll Hypaque and the step of enriching the peripheral blood mononuclear cells for monocytes comprises placing the peripheral blood mononuclear cells in contact with a surface to which monocytes adhere and removing non-adherent cells.
- This method may further comprise the step of performing leukapheresis.
- Another aspect of the present invention is a method of increasing the antigen presenting ability of leukemia cells comprising contacting the leukemia cells with an agent which elevates the intracellular calcium concentration to a level sufficient to increase the antigen presenting ability.
- the agent comprises a calcium ionophore.
- Another aspect of the present invention is a method of inducing bone marrow progenitor cells to upregulate B7.1, B7.2, ICAM-1, CD83, CD40 and CD1a comprising contacting said bone marrow progenitor cells with an agent which increases the intracellular calcium level.
- the agent comprises a calcium ionophore.
- Another aspect of the present invention is a method of inducing endothelial cells to upregulate ICAM-1 and CD40 comprising contacting the endotelial cells with an agent which increases the intracellular calcium level.
- the agent comprises a calcium ionophore.
- Another aspect of the present invention is a method of enhancing the ability of an agent which increases the intracellular calcium level to induce a monocyte to express the phenotype of an activated myeloid dendritic cell comprising contacting the monocyte with said agent and with amphotericin B.
- the agent is a calcium ionophore.
- Yet another aspect of the present invention is a method of enhancing the ability of a first agent which increases the intracellular calcium level to induce a monocyte to express the phenotype of an activated myeloid dendritic cell comprising contacting the monocyte with the agent and with a second agent selected from the group consisting of rhGM-CSF, rhlL-4, rhlL-12, rhlL-2, and rhTNFalpha.
- the first agent comprises a calcium ionophore.
- Another aspect of the present invention is a method of obtaining cells having a desired cell surface expression pattern of immune molecules comprising contacting monocytes with a first agent which increases the intracellular calcium level and a second agent selected from the group consisting of rh-ILIO, glucocorticoids, prostaglandins, TGF-beta, calcineurin antagonists, and dibutryl cAMP.
- the first agent comprises a calcium ionophore.
- the calcineurin antagonist comprises cyclosporine A.
- the first agent comprises a calcium ionophore.
- Another aspect of the present invention is a method of treating a subject having leukemia comprising the steps of obtaining leukemia cells from the blood of the subject, contacting the leukemia cells with an agent which increases the intracellular calcium concentration, thereby enhancing the antigen presenting ability of the leukemia cells, and transferring the leukemia cells back into the subject.
- the method further comprises rendering the leukemia cells obtained from the blood of incapable of proliferating.
- the agent comprises a calcium ionophore.
- Another embodiment of the present invention is a method of treating a subject having cancer comprising the steps of obtaining monocytes from the blood of the subject, contacting the monocytes with an agent which increases the intracellular calcium concentration, thereby enhancing the antigen presenting ability of the monocytes, exposing the monocytes to tumor antigens from the cancer, and transferring the monocytes cells back into said subject.
- the agent comprises a calcium ionophore.
- Another aspect of the present invention is a method of treating a subject having cancer comprising the steps of obtaining bone marrow myeloid progenitor cells from the blood of the subject, contacting the bone marrow myeloid progenitor cells with an agent which increases the intracellular calcium concentration, thereby enhancing the antigen presenting ability of the bone marrow myeloid progenitor cells, exposing said bone marrow myeloid progenitor cells to tumor antigens from the cancer, and transferring the bone marrow myeloid progenitor cells back into the subject.
- the agent comprises a calcium ionophore.
- Another aspect of the present invention is a method of enhancing the ability of an agent which increases the intracellular calcium level to induce a monocyte to express the phenotype of an activated myeloid dendritic cell comprising contacting the monocyte with the agent and with endotoxin.
- the agent comprises a calcium ionophore.
- Another aspect of the present invention is a method of enhancing the ability of an agent which increases the intracellular calcium level to induce a monocyte to express the phenotype of an activated myeloid dendritic cell comprising contacting the monocyte with the agent and with rh-IFN-gamma.
- Figure 1 A shows the percentage of peripheral blood mononuclear cells in individual elutriation fractions which had the phenotype of immature dendritic cells.
- Figure 1 B shows the percentage of total leukapheresed cells in each elutriation fraction with the phenotype of immature dendritic cells.
- Figure 2A is a FACS analysis of pooled MOMC stained with mouse IgG subclass matched phycoerythrin (PE) and FITC conjugated control Ab.
- Figure 2B is a FACS analysis of pooled MOMC stained with FITC-conjugated mouse anti-human CD14 vs PE-conjugated mouse anti-human CD33.
- Figure 2C is a FACS analysis of pooled MOMC stained with FITC-COCK vs PE-conjugated mouse anti-human CD33.
- Figure 2D is a FACS analysis of pooled MOMC stained with stained with FITC-anti-CD14 vs PE-mouse anti-human HLA-DR.
- Figure 2E is a FACS analysis of pooled MOMC stained with unconjugated mouse anti-human monomorphic HLA-DQ, counterstained with PE-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (GAM-PE) , blocked with 10% mouse serum, then stained with FITC-COCK.
- Figure 2F is a FACS analysis of pooled MOMC stained with FITC-COCK vs PE-conjugated mouse anti-human monomorphic HLA-ABC.
- Figure 2G is a FACS analysis of pooled MOMC stained with stained with FITC-COCK vs PE-mouse anti-human CD40.
- Figure 2H is a FACS analysis of pooled MOMC stained with FITC-COCK vs PE-mouse anti-human B7.1 (CD80).
- Figure 21 is a FACS analysis of pooled MOMC stained with FITC-COCK vs PE-mouse anti-human B7.2 (CD86).
- Figure 2J is a FACS analysis of pooled MOMC stained with FITC-COCK vs PE-mouse anti-human ICAM-1 (CD54).
- Figure 2K is a FACS analysis of pooled MOMC stained with stained with unconjugated mouse anti-human
- CD83 (HB15a), counterstained with PE-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG, blocked with 10% MS, then stained with FITC-COCK.
- FIG 3A shows the T cell allosensitization potency of MOMC groups not treated with A23187 ("Untreated”).
- Figure 3B shows the T cell aliffsitization potency of MOMC groups treated with A23187 ("A23187
- Figure 4 shows the T cell sensitizing abilities of monocytes treated with calcium ionophore, monocytes treated with rlL-4/rGM-CSF, and untreated monocytes.
- Figure 5A shows the results of CD8+ T cell sensitization experiments with MOMC pulsed with the influenza peptide.
- Figure 5B shows the results of CD8+ T cell sensitization experiments with MOMC pulsed with the MART-1 peptide.
- Figure 6 shows the B7.1, B7.2, ICAM-1, HLA-DR, HLA-ABC, CD40, and CD83 expression patterns of purified CD14 pos cells cultured in medium alone, purified CD14 nefl,dta cells cultured in medium alone, purified CD14 pos cells cultured with 750 ng/ml A23187, and purified CD14 ne9,dim cells cultured with 750 ng/ml A23187.
- Figure 7 illustrates the currently recognized pathways involved in the cellular response to calcium.
- Figure 8 shows the pattern of cell surface marker expression observed when monocytes were treated with a calcium ionophore and additionally a pharmacologic inhibitor of the cellular calcium response.
- Figure 9 shows the results of an experiment in which monocytes were contacted with CD40L.
- Figure 10 shows the results of another experiment in which monocytes were contacted with CD40L.
- Figure 11 shows the levels of B7.1 and CD14 expression in cells treated with various levels of CD40L or CD40L plus cyclosporine A.
- Figure 12 shows the levels of Class I, Class II, CD80, CD86, CD40, CD54 and CD83 expression in untreated CML cells (medium alone) after 48, 72, and 96 hours of culture.
- Figure 13 shows the levels of Class I, Class II, CD80, CD86, CD40, CD54 and CD83 expression in calcium- ionophore treated CML cells after 48, 72, and 96 hours of culture.
- Figure 14A shows the level of allosensitizing T cell stimulation by untreated CML cells, untreated monocytes, calcium ionophore treated CML cells and calcium ionophore treated monocytes obtained from a first donor.
- Figure 14B shows the level of alensitizing T cell stimulation by untreated CML cells, untreated monocytes, calcium ionophore treated CML cells and calcium ionophore treated monocytes obtained from a second donor.
- Figure 14C shows the level of alensitizing T cell stimulation by untreated CML cells,, calcium ionophore treated CML cells and calcium ionophore GM2/12 treated CML cells obtained from a third donor.
- Figure 14D shows the level of alensitizing T cell stimulation by untreated CML cells,, calcium ionophore treated CML cells and calcium ionophore GM2/12 treated CML cells obtained from a fourth donor.
- Figure 14E shows the level of allosensitizing T cell stimulation by untreated CML cells,, calcium ionophore treated CML cells and calcium ionophore GM2/12 treated CML cells obtained from a fifth donor.
- Figure 14F shows the level of allosensitizing T cell stimulation by untreated CML cells,, calcium ionophore treated CML cells and calcium ionophore GM2/12 treated CML cells obtained from a sixth donor.
- Figure 15A shows the expression level of MHC Class I in CML cells from a first donor which were untreated (No Tx), treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore (No Tx+CSA), treated with calcium ionophore (Cl) or treated with calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A (CI + CSA).
- Figure 15B shows the expression level of MHC Class II in CML cells from a first donor which were untreated (No Tx), treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore (No Tx + CSA), treated with calcium ionophore (Cl) or treated with calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A (CI + CSA).
- Figure 15C shows the expression level of CD80 in CML cells from a first donor which were untreated (No Tx), treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore (No Tx + CSA), treated with calcium ionophore (Cl) or treated with calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A (CI+CSA).
- Figure 15D shows the expression level of CD86 in CML cells from a first donor which were untreated (No Tx), treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore (No Tx+CSA), treated with calcium ionophore (Cl) or treated with calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A (CI+CSA).
- Figure 15E shows the expression level of CD40 in CML cells from a first donor which were untreated (No Tx), treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore (No Tx + CSA), treated with calcium ionophore (Cl) or treated with calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A (CI+CSA).
- Figure 15F shows the expression level of CD54 in CML cells from a first donor which were untreated (No Tx), treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore (No Tx + CSA), treated with calcium ionophore (Cl) or treated with calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A (CI + CSA).
- Figure 15G shows the expression level of CD83 in CML cells from a first donor which were untreated (No Tx), treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore (No Tx + CSA), treated with calcium ionophore (Cl) or treated with calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A (CI+CSA).
- Figure 16A shows the expression level of MHC Class I in CML cells from a second donor which were untreated (No Tx), treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore (No Tx + CSA), treated with calcium ionophore (Cl) or treated with calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A (CI + CSA).
- Figure 16B shows the expression level of MHC Class II in CML cells from a second donor which were untreated (No Tx), treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore (No Tx+CSA), treated with calcium ionophore (Cl) or treated with calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A (CI+CSA).
- Figure 16C shows the expression level of CD80 in CML cells from a second donor which were untreated
- No Tx treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore
- No Tx + CSA treated with calcium ionophore
- CI+CSA calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A
- Figure 16D shows the expression level of CD86 in CML cells from a second donor which were untreated (No Tx), treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore (No Tx + CSA), treated with calcium ionophore (Cl) or treated with calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A (CI+CSA).
- Figure 16E shows the expression level of CD40 in CML cells from a second donor which were untreated (No Tx), treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore (No Tx + CSA), treated with calcium ionophore (Cl) or treated with calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A (CI+CSA).
- Figure 16F shows the expression level of CD54 in CML cells from a second donor which were untreated (No Tx), treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore (No Tx + CSA), treated with calcium ionophore (Cl) or treated with calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A (CI + CSA).
- Figure 16G shows the expression level of CD83 in CML cells from a second donor which were untreated (No Tx), treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore (No Tx + CSA), treated with calcium ionophore (Cl) or treated with calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A (CI+CSA).
- the present invention relates to methods of inducing cells to exhibit the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells and methods for preparing the cells which are to be induced to exhibit that phenotype.
- a variety of cell types may be induced to exhibit the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells, including monocytes, pluripotent bone marrow cells, and cancer cells. Each of these cell types may be induced to rapidly exhibit the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells by contacting the cells with an effective amount of an agent which raises the intracellular calcium concentration to a level sufficient to induce that phenotype.
- Dendritic cells from ontogenetic orphans to myelomonoc ⁇ tic descendents. Immunol. Today 77:273; Thomas, R., L S. Davis, and P. E. Lipsky. 1993. Comparative accessory cell function of human peripheral blood dendritic cells and monocytes. J. Immunol. 757:6840. Thomas, R., L. S. Davis, and P. E. Lipsky. 1993. Isolation and characterization of human peripheral blood dendritic cells. J. Immunol. 150:821; Thomas, R. and P. E. Lipsky. 1994. Human peripheral blood dendritic cell subsets. Isolation and characterization of precursor and mature antigen-presenting cells.
- CCE more specifically isolates monocytes and dendritic cells from other white blood cells.
- countercurrent centrifugal elutriation is a technique whereby the cells are subject to simultaneous centrifugation and a washout stream of buffer which is constantly increasing in flow rate.
- the constantly increasing countercurrent flow of buffer leads to fractional cell separations that are largely based on cell size.
- the present invention exploits the selection mechanism of CCE in conjunction with leukapheresis to result in high purity dendritic cell preparations.
- the pattern of surface marker expression characteristic of dendritic cells was characterized a FACS technique that would detect and measure DC subpopulations present in each elutriation fraction from fresh peripheral blood was developed. This involved simultaneously staining the cells with a cocktail of fluorescent antibodies of one color (e.g., fluorescein) to markers that are absent from DCs (e.g. CD3, CD20, CD56 and CD14) and additional antibodies of a different color (e.g.
- fluorescent antibodies of one color e.g., fluorescein
- markers that are absent from DCs e.g. CD3, CD20, CD56 and CD14
- additional antibodies of a different color e.g.
- Leukapheresis The current patent application discloses a method for rapidly isolating dendritic cells from peripheral blood.
- a patient initially undergoes leukapheresis (LP) to isolate white blood cells from other blood cells.
- LP leukapheresis
- Leukapheresis involves extracorporealizing blood continuously from the human donor or patient, using laminar flow properties to separate mononuclear (white) cells and platelets from red cells and plasma. The red cells and plasma were then returned back into the patient. In this fashion, the white ceils and platelets can be selectively removed from many liters of patient or donor blood over a several hour period without harming the patient.
- Countercurrent Centrifugal Elutriation Countercurrent Centrifugal Elutriation
- CCE countercurrent centrifugal elutriation
- T lymphocytes to novel antigens was attributable to a small dendritic cell subpopulation.
- the monocytes in the monocyte fraction consistently failed to upregulate important costimulatory molecules such as B7.1 when they were cultured in the presence of a variety of test antigens.
- the elutriated dendritic cell subpopulation did upregulate costimulatory molecules in the presence of certain antigens, and such upregulation was accompanied by improved antigen presentation.
- upregulation of costimulatory molecules in the dendritic cell subpopulation did not occur in the presence of most tested antigens, including tumor antigens.
- CS3000 pheresis apparatus (Fenwal, Inc. Round Lake, IL). While this product is a preferred software and hardware package that can be used to provide the desired leukapheresis properties, one of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that any similar product that can be programmed to be neutrophil-depleting and platelet-rich will also work in the present invention.
- CCE elutriation
- lymphocyte fraction Usually pooled as “lymphocyte fraction” Usually pooled as “APC” fraction
- the cells are resuspended in EDTA-free, Ca + + /Mg + * free Hanks' balanced salt solution (HBSS) before being subjected to elutriation.
- HBSS Hanks' balanced salt solution
- FACS Analysis to Monitor Quality of Elutriation Quality control of APC collection and confirmation of their successful activation in culture is dependent upon a simultaneous multi-color FACS analysis technique we have developed to monitor both monocytes and the dendritic cell subpopulation as well as possible contaminant T lymphocytes. It is based upon the fact that DCs have absent or low expression of the following markers: CD3 (T cell); CD14 (monocyte); CD16,56,57 (NK/LAK cells); CD19, 20 (B cells).
- DCs do express large quantities of HLA-DR, significant HLA-DQ and B7.2 (but little or no B7.1) at the time they are circulating in the blood (in addition they express Leu M7 and M9, myeloid markers which are also expressed by monocytes and neutrophils).
- PI propridium iodide
- Color #1 CD3 alone, CD14 alone, etc; Leu M7 or Leu M9; anti-Class I, etc Color #2: HLA-Dq, B7.1, B7.2, CD25 (IL2r), ICAM, LFA-3, etc.
- the goal of FACS analysis at the time of collection is to confirm that the DCs are enriched in the expected fractions (150-190), to monitor neutrophil contamination, and to make sure that appropriate markers are expressed.
- This rapid bulk collection of enriched DCs from human peripheral blood, suitable for clinical applications is absolutely dependent on the analytic FACS technique described above for quality control. If need be, mature DCs can be immediately separated from monocytes at this point by fluorescent sorting for "cocktail negative" cells. We do not, however, routinely separate DCs from monocytes because, as will be detailed below, the monocytes themselves are still capable of differentiating into DCs or functional DC-like cells in culture.
- the DC rich/monocyte APC fractions (usually 150 through 190) can be pooled and cryopreserved for future use, or immediately placed in short term culture.
- Example 1 describes the isolation of dendritic cells from normal humans and humans with colon cancer.
- upregulate, downregulate, and de novo express mean that the cell type exposed to the agent which induces the cell surface expression of an activated myeloid dendritic cell phenotype increases, decreases, or causes expression of a cell surface marker not previously expressed for the relevant cell surface marker relative to a control cell of the same cell type which has not been exposed to the agent.
- Example 1 Two patients were hooked up to FenwalTM CS-3000 leukapheresis apparatus' running a Procedure 8 modification software program.
- Patient #1 had been previously diagnosed with colon cancer, and Patient #2 was a normal control.
- the FenwalTM apparatus was configured to isolate a sample of neutrophil-depleted, platelet-rich cells from each patients' peripheral blood. After 3-5 hours of leukaphereis, the isolated blood cells from each patient were quickly spun down in a centrifuge and then rinsed in citrate buffer to remove any excess plasma, tumor related proteins or calcium.
- the cells were resuspended in EDTA-free, Ca"/Mg" HBSS.
- the isolated cells from each patient were then subject to elutriation on a BeckmanTM JE-6B elutriation rotor. Once reaching a speed of 3000 rpm, 5x10 9 cells were elutriated by pressurized air at buffer flow rates of 120, 140, 150, 160, 170, 180, 190 and 200 cc/minute.
- the vertical (Y) axis showed staining for a cocktail of CD3, CD14, CD20 and CD56 surface antigens.
- the vast majority of cells stained in the pooled fractions were expected to be CD14+ (ie: monocytes).
- the horizontal (X) axis of the FACS plot illustrated staining for DR, B7.1 or B72 surface antigens.
- Our results of the FACS analysis were as follows: Normal Donor (NO calcium ionophore treatment)
- populations of activated dendritic cells isolated by the method of the present invention can be easily re-introduced into a patient to help augment a weak or dysfunctional immune system.
- Example 2 describes the preparation of human peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC).
- PBMC peripheral blood mononuclear cells
- the washed cells were resuspended in Ca + + /Mg + + free, pyrogen-free HBSS (Bio Whittaker, Walkersville, MD) and elutriated using a Model J-6M centrifuge equipped with a JE-5.0 elutriation rotor operating at 1725g and 20° C (Beckman Instruments, Palo Alto, CA). (Cohen, P. A. et al. 1993. J. Immunother. 74:242; Abrahamsen, T. G. et al. 1991. J. Clin. Apheresis. 5:48).
- lymphocyte-rich 120 and 140 cc/minute
- transitional 150 cc/minute
- MOMC-rich 170, 190, 200 cc/minute
- a final MOMC-rich fraction was collected at zero rpm (rotor off, or R/0 fraction).
- Fractions were accumulated in Life Cell tissue culture vessels (Baxter Health Care, Deerfield, IL) on ice to inhibit cellular adherence. Lymphocyte-rich fractions (120-140) but not MOMC-rich fractions were further purified with density gradient centrifugation using pyrogen-free Ficoll-Hypaque (Bio Whittaker) to remove red blood cells.
- Example 3 Elutriated fraction cells were analyzed before and/or after in vitro culture by fluorescent multicolor flow cytometry (FACScan, Becton-Dickinson, Mountain View, CA). Cells were stained at 4° C using Ca ++ /Mg + + -free HBSS with 0.2% BSA and 0.1 % sodium azide as a diluent/wash FACS buffer. Cells were incubated with 1 mg/ml human IgG (Sigma Chemical, St. Louis, MO) for 10 minutes to block FcR, then, in most cases, double stained with PE- and FITC-conjugated Ab for 30 minutes.
- FIGS 1A and 1 B The results of the analysis are shown in Figures 1A and 1 B, in which the cells which were present in each of the elutriation fractions, were stained with PE-conjugated mouse anti-human HLA-DR and a cocktail (COCK) of FITCconjugated mouse anti-human CD3, CD14, CD20 and CD57 to determine the percentage of immature dendritic cells present in each fraction.
- the abscissa shows elutriation rate in cc/min at the time of each fraction collection; " > 190" designates either pooled 200 + R/0 fractions or the 200 fraction alone when the R/0 fraction was discarded.
- Figure 1A the ordinate shows the percentage of cells in each fraction which were HLA-DR pos , C0CK nes ' dim (neg/dim as used herein meaning that there was little or no expression of the marker or markers analyzed). This correlated closely to the fraction of cells which were CD33 pos CD14 n ⁇ s,dim . As shown in Figure 1A, only a marginally detectable subpopulation of cells ( ⁇ 1.0 %) displayed the iDC staining pattern in early, lymphocyte-predominant elutriation fractions (120-140 cc/minute flow rates). However, a larger percentage of cells (up to 28%) displayed this pattern in subsequent fractions ( Figure 1A).
- 150 cc/minute fractions were typically a transitional mixture of lymphocytes and CD33 pos myeloid origin mononuclear cells (MOMC), while later fractions (170, 190 and 200 cc/minute, and R/0) consisted predominantly of MOMC.
- Figure 1 B shows the percentage of the total leukapheresed cells with the surface phenotype of immature dendritic cells (iDC) recovered in each elutriation fraction from four representative donors. The calculated content of each donor's pooled MOMC-rich fractions (170 + 190 + > 190) is also displayed.
- Example 4 describes the enrichment of enrichment of CD14 ne ⁇ myeloid origin mononuclear cells (MOMC) (immature dendritic cells) by FACS.
- MOMC mononuclear cells
- CD14 neg immature dendritic cells were sorted by flow cytometry (Becton Dickinson FACStar) from elutriated MOMC prior to culture using a negative selection technique.
- the threshold was set on forward angle light scatter and the sorting gate was set on fluorescence.
- Thawed or fresh elutriation fractions were stained with a cocktail of FITC-conjugated azide-free anti-human CD 14, CD3, CD20 and CD56 to identify monocytes and contaminant T, B, and NK cells. Strongly and dimly staining sorted cells were discarded; nonstaining cells were collected and either immediately analyzed or placed in culture.
- COCKTAIL designates a cocktail of FITC-conjugated mouse anti-human CD3, CD14,
- CD14 ne9,dim 7-10% displayed a CD14 ne9,dim , CD33 pos iDC phenotype.
- Trace numbers of contaminant CD33 ne9 cells ( ⁇ 2% of total cells) were all CD14 ne8 (Fig. 2B) and included both C0CK ne ⁇ and C0CK pDS cells (Fig. 2C), the latter proving to be contaminant lymphocytes.
- FIGS. 2D-2K The pattern of cell surface markers present in uncultured monocyte fractions was also assessed. The results are shown in Figures 2D-2K.
- FIG 2D cells were stained with FITC-anti-CD14 vs PE-mouse anti-human HLA-DR.
- Figure 2E cells were stained with unconjugated mouse anti-human monomorphic HLA-DQ, counterstained with PE-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG (GAM-PE) , blocked with 10% mouse serum, then stained with FITC-COCK.
- FIG 2F cells were stained with FITC-COCK vs PE-conjugated mouse anti-human monomorphic HLA-ABC.
- FIG. 2G cells were stained with FITC-COCK vs PE-mouse anti-human CD40.
- Figure 2H cells were stained with FITC-COCK vs PE-mouse anti-human B7.1 (CD80).
- Figure 21 cells were stained with FITC-COCK vs PE-mouse anti-human B7.2 (CD86).
- Figure 2J cells were stained with FITC-COCK vs PE-mouse anti-human ICAM-1 (CD54).
- Figure 2K cells were stained with unconjugated mouse anti-human CD83 (HB15a), counterstained with PE-conjugated goat anti-mouse IgG, blocked with 10% MS, then stained with FITC-COCK. Subclass matched unconjugated mouse Ig controls for Figure 2E and Figure 2K counterstained with GAM-PE resulted in background levels of fluorescent intensity identical to those seen in Figure 2A.
- CD86 surface B7.2
- ICAM-1 CD54
- CD80 undetectable B7.1
- Figure 2H-2J CD40 expression was absent or dim (Fig. 1 G). This profile was observed whether MOMC were obtained from healthy volunteers or from patients with malignancies.
- CD14 nEg cells sorted by FACS were indistinguishable ultrastructurally from predominantly (88-90%) CD14 pos M0MC.
- MOMC collected by this method are in a minimally manipulated state, not having contacted density gradient media, adherence substrates, FBS, and/or pyrogen prior to elective culture and Ag exposure; in addition, ex vivo contact with stagnant platelets, neutrophils and donor plasma has been minimized.
- the ultrastructural and i munophenotypic profiles of uncultured, elutriated iDC and monocytes are very similar, except for CD14 expression.
- Monocytes treated with calcium ionophore exhibited a marked downregulation of cell surface CD 14 within
- Monocytes treated with calcium ionophore also exhibited a marked upregulation of B7.2 (CD86) within 18 hours of calcium ionophore treatment initiation which occurs in all donors, even those who display sluggish B7.1 upregulation, as discussed below.
- B7.1 was typically highly detectable but not uniformly expressed at 18 hours. Rarely an occasional donor's monocytes show negligible expression of B7.1 at 18 hours unless adjunct enhancing agents such as amphotericin B, LPS (endotoxin), rhGM-CSF or rhlFN-gamma are also present.
- calcium ionophore treated monocytes had the morphological characteristics of activated myeloid dendritic cells.
- Calcium ionophore treated monocytes appeared much more vacuolated on light microscopy within 20-40 hours of calcium ionophore treatment, and electron microscopy revealed calcium ionophore treated monocytes to have markedly increased endoplasmic reticulum, lysosomal and Golgi content.
- Calcium ionophore treated monocytes which were transferred to polylysine coated glass slides after 40 hours maintained a small rounded appearance and developed multiple short or long dendritic processes extending from all surfaces in contact with the glass, with many cells having a uniform halo of spike-like processes. This tendency to develop long dendritic processes increased markedly between 40 and 96 hours in culture.
- calcium ionophore treated monocytes also developed the ability to effectively present antigens, a functional characteristic of activated myeloid dendritic cells.
- Uncultured monocytes and DC were each purified from elutriation fractions using Miltenyi microsuperparamagnetic beads; monocytes were positively selected based on CD14 expression, while dendritic cells were negatively selected based on low CD 14 expression, then positively selected based on CD33 (myeloid marker) expression.
- Each isolated fraction was cultured for 40 hours either in medium alone or in ionophore A23187 750 ng/ml, then harvested and either FACS analyzed or microcultured with freshly prepared allogeneic T lymphocytes.
- calcium ionophore treatment enhances antigen-presenting efficiency of both monocytes and dendritic cells which correlates well to its enhancing effects on costimulatory molecule and MHC expression in both these subpopulations; during calcium ionophore treatment both monocytes and dendritic cells trend towards maximal development of an activated dendritic cell phenotype.
- the antigen presenting ability of monocytes treated with calcium ionophores was superior to that obtained when monocytes were treated with rhGM-CSF plus ri ⁇ lL-4.
- Example 7 Monocyte rich elutriation fractions were cultured for 40 hours with either no additives, ionophore A23187 750 ng/ml, or rhlL-4 (1000 u/ml) and rhGM-CSF (20 ng/ml), a cytokine combination which leads monocytes to differentiate completely to dendritic cells during seven days of culture (Pickl et al, J. Immunol. 157:3850, 1996). MOMC were then harvested, irradiated (1000 rads) and cocultured in triplicate at various MOMC: T cell ratios with 10 5 allogeneic freshly prepared CD4 + T cells in 0.2ml RPMI with 5% AB plasma in 96 well tissue flat bottom culture plates.
- antigen presenting ability refers to the ability of a cell to stimulate T cells to proliferate, secrete interferon, or generate an immune response.
- ionophore treated monocytes displayed a much greater T cell sensitizing capacity than either rlL-4/rGM-CSF treated or untreated monocytes (ionophore treated > > IL-4/GM-CSF treated > untreated).
- calcium ionophore treatment not only induces upregulation of costimulatory molecules and downregulation of CD 14 compared to treatment with cytokine alone, but also hastens acquisition of improved antigen- presenting efficiency.
- Monocyte-rich elutriation fractions from healthy HLA-A2.1 donors were either untreated or treated with ionophore A23187 750 ng/ml for 40 hours, then pulsed with either the M1 influenza-derived peptide or the
- MART1 melanoma-derived peptide (the M1 peptide is a "recall antigen" for all HLA-A2.1 P ° S individuals, whereas the
- MART1 peptide is usually a "recall antigen" only for HLA-A2.1 pos patients with melanoma).
- Antigen-pulsed monocytes were cocultured with freshly prepared autologous CD8 + T cells for 8-10 days; the T cells were then harvested and cocultured with peptide-pulsed HLA-A2.1 positive T2 stimulator cells which had been pulsed 2 hours with 1 ⁇ g/ml of either the MART1 peptide, the influenza M1 derived peptide, or an irrelevant HIV peptide to assess whether specific sensitization to FLU or MART1 peptides was attained.
- FIG. 5A shows the results obtained with MOMC pulsed with the influenza peptide
- Figure 5B shows the results obtained with MOMC pulsed with the MART-1 peptide. Both untreated and A23187-treated monocytes were equally able to stimulate expansion of the autologous
- the optimal doses of ionophore for achieving DC differentiation of monocytes vary among culture media and appear to be related to the protein content (i.e., 375-750 ng/ml is optimal concentration of A23187 in media with 5% AB serum; 180-375 ng/ml for 10% FCS; 45-90 ng/ml for serum free media).
- the ability of calcium ionophores to induce monocytes to express the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells does not depend on the interaction of the monocytes or other myeloid cells with other cell types such as dendritic cells.
- Monocytes in monocyte rich elutriation fractions were further purified using Miltenyi microsuperparagnetic beads coupled to anti-CD14. After incubation with these beads cells were applied to a magnetized column to positively select the strongly CD14 pos cells, and were enriched to > 98% purity. Unpurified or purified monocytes were cultured for 40 hours in our standard culture medium with 750 ng/ml ionophore A23187, then harvested. The recovered cells were either immediately FACS analyzed or added in graded numbers to freshly prepared allogeneic T cells to assay their antigen presenting function. Four days later, the T cell cultures were pulsed with 3 H-TdR (tritiated thymidine) and harvested 18 hours later.
- 3 H-TdR tritiated thymidine
- Row 1 A-G purified CD14 pos fraction cultured in medium alone.
- Row 2 A-G purified CD14 ne9,dim fraction cultured in medium alone.
- Row 4 A-G purified CD14 ne9 ' dim fraction cultured with 750 ng/ml A23187.
- the FACS analysis of Figure 6 demonstrates that purified monocytes downregulated CD14, and upregulated B7.1, B7.2, ICAM-1, HLA-DR, HLA-ABC, CD40 and CD83 equivalently to the monocytes in prepurified fractions.
- cells calcium ionophore-treated purified monocytes displayed an enhanced T cell sensitizing capacity identical on a cell numbers basis to the ionophore-treated prepurified fraction cells.
- the monocyte response to calcium ionophore is not dependent on contaminant cells such as lymphocytes or DC, and the enhanced T cell sensitizing efficiency of ionophore-treated monocytes is also not a reflection of activated contaminant cells.
- the present invention encompasses methods for inducing the phenotype of a myeloid dendritic cell by increasing the intracellular calcium concentration.
- Examples 10-16 below demonstrate that the ability of the above agents to induce the expression of an activated dendritic cell phenotype results from an increase in intracellular calcium concentration.
- EDTA was removed from cultured cells by two methods.
- the first method involved adding EDTA to cells cultured in normal, calcium-containing RPMI.
- EDTA is a chelator of divalent cations, including calcium and magnesium.
- EDTA binds tightly to these ions, and while the ions remain in the culture system, the binding of EDTA renders them biologically unavailable to the cells.
- EDTA had potent toxic effects on human peripheral blood monocytes, and thus monocytes could not be evaluated by this method.
- concentrations of EDTA ( ⁇ 1uM) that strongly suppressed the effects of ionophore were not toxic to HL-60 cells.
- CD80 upregulation was suppressed 100% by a 1uM dose of EDTA, whereas CD86 levels were diminished by more than 85%. Almost identical suppression was seen at a 0.5uM dose of EDTA, but the suppressive effects rapidly diminished at 0.25uM.
- the second method involved washing the cells extensively in calcium-free RPMI medium, and culturing them in the same calcium-free medium supplemented with serum that had been dialyzed against calcium-free phosphate-buffered saline. Thus no calcium was present in the cultures.
- Use of calcium-free RPMI and dialyzed serum had similar effects on HL-60 cells.
- the ionophore-induced upregulation of both CD80 and CD86 were almost 100% ablated under calcium-free conditions.
- T cell receptor TCR
- IL-2 interleukin-2
- Engagement of the TCR initiates a number of biochemical events necessary for IL-2 gene transcription, one of these being an elevation in levels of cytoplasmic calcium.
- An enzymatic cascade then transduces the calcium signal to activate transcription of the iL-2 gen as follows.
- Calmodulin is capable of binding to and activating a cytopiasmically localized regulatory protein called calmodulin.
- Calmodulin has no known enzymatic function itself, but it can in turn bind to and activate a number of enzymes, including the serine/threonine protein phosphatase, calcineurin, and a series of calmodulin-dependent protein kinases. These enzymes can then act on and alter the activation status of a number of nuclear transcription factors which bind to discreet promoter regions and control the transcriptional activity of specific genes.
- calcineurin acts on the nuclear factor of activated T cells (NF-AT), activating it through dephosphorylation. The activated NF-AT then translocates to the nucleus and binds to specific regions of the IL-2 gene where, in cooperation with other nuclear factors (activated through other pathways), it directs IL-2 transcription.
- NF-AT nuclear factor of activated T cells
- FIG. 7 illustrates the presently known pathways involved in the cellular response to calcium. As illustrated in Figure 7, calcium mobilization activates calmodulin. The activated calmodulin then acts to activate calcineurin (which, as disclosed for the first time herein, upregulates costimulatory molecules) and the calmodulin dependent kinase (CaMK) which down regulates CD14.
- calcineurin which, as disclosed for the first time herein, upregulates costimulatory molecules
- CaMK calmodulin dependent kinase
- calmodulin activity can be suppressed by the drugs trifluoperazine dimaleate and W-7.
- Some of the calmodulin-dependent kinases can be blocked by compounds such as KN-62 and KT-5926.
- One highly specific inhibitor of calcineurin activity is the immunosuppressive drug, Cyclosporine A. Examples 11- 14 below demonstrate that agents which interfere with the activities of enzymes involved in the transduction of the calcium response block the ability of calcium ionophore to induce the expression of an activated myeloid dendritic cell phenotype.
- calmodulin antagonists attenuate ionophore-i ⁇ duced acquisition of ADC features in both monocytes and cells having a myeloid origin, such as HL-60 cells.
- TpD trifluoperazine dimaleate
- W-7 50-1 uM
- TpD 10uM
- calmodulin kinase inhibitiors also blocked the calcium ionophore mediated induction of an activated dendritic cell phenotype.
- the calmodulin kinase inhibitors KN-62 (20uM) or KT-5926 (1 uM) was added to HL-60 cells in the presence of 188ng/ml A23187. Twenty four hours later the level of CD80 was analyzed. KN-62 led to inhibition of CD80 expression at levels of greater than 50% for each inhibitor.
- A attenuates calcium ionophore-induced acquisition of an activated myeloid dendritic cell phenotype.
- Cyclosporine A (5-.00005ug/ml) was added to HL-60 cells along with 188 ⁇ g/ml A23187, harvested 24 hours later, and subjected to FACS analysis.
- the optimal concentration of CsA led to over a 90% inhibition of ionophore-induced CD80 expression, and an 80% inhibition in CD86, and ICAM 1 expression.
- Human peripheral blood monocytes treated with 750ng/ml A23187 plus CsA also showed suppression of ionophore-induced expression of CD80 ( > 70%) CD86 ( > 85%) and CD40 ( > 45%).
- levels of ionophore-induced enhancement of HLA-ABC and downregulation of CD14 were unaffected, while HLA-DR expression was further enhanced by addition of CsA (15-20%).
- HL-60 cells Treatment of HL-60 cells with CsA markedly antagonized the improved antigen presenting function normally induced by calcium ionophore treatment.
- HL-60 cells were treated with or without 0.5 uG/ml CsA, then treated with 188 ng/ml calcium ionophore A23817, with or without rhlFN-gamma 1000 u/ml and rhGM-CSF 20 ng/ml for 72 hours.
- Fresh allogeneic naive (CD45R0 negative) T cells were prepared and cocultured with graded numbers of irradiated (3000R) HL-60 cells treated under the above-described conditions.
- the present invention includes methods for inducing a monocyte to express a desired pattern of cells surface markers comprising contacting the monocytes with a one or more agents which act on one or more pathways involved in the cellular response to calcium to provide the desired pattern of cell surface markers.
- the method comprises contacting the monocytes with a first agent which increases the intracellular calcium level and a second agent which acts on one or more components of the cellular calcium response.
- the first agent may comprise a calcium ionophore or CD40L.
- the second agent may comprise a pharmacologic agent such as a calmodulin inhibitor such as trifluoperazi ⁇ e or W-7, a calcineurin inhibitor such as KT5926, or a calmodulin dependent kinase inhibitor such as Cyclosporine A or FK-506.
- a pharmacologic agent such as a calmodulin inhibitor such as trifluoperazi ⁇ e or W-7, a calcineurin inhibitor such as KT5926, or a calmodulin dependent kinase inhibitor such as Cyclosporine A or FK-506.
- Another aspect of the present invention is a method for evaluating the effects on monocyte cell surface marker expression comprising culturing the monocytes in serum-free medium and contacting the monocytes with a desired combination of agents involved in the cellular response to calcium. Growth in serum-free medium reduces the toxicity of agents which block the cellular response to calcium.
- the agents may be agents which increase the intracellular calcium level such as calcium ionophores or CD40L, calmodulin inhibitors such as trifluoperazine or W-7, calcineurin inhibitors such as KT5926, or calmodulin dependent kinase inhibitors such as Cyclosporine A or FK-506.
- Monocytes were cultured in 24 well cluster plates at 3-6 x 10 6 cells per well in serum-free medium (typically Macrophage-SFM from Gibco, Grand Island) in the absence or presence of 20-50 ng/ml rhGM-CSF (Peprotech, Rockville, MD). During the first 20 hours individual inhibitors were added as follows: 10-20 micromolar W-7, a calmodulin inhibitor; 0.5 microgm/ml cyclosporine (CsA), a calcineurin inhibitor; KT5926, a calmodulin dependent kinase inhibitor, 1 micromolar; or control agents such as KT5823, KT5720, and chelethyrine chloride (PKG,PKA and PKC inhibitors respectively).
- serum-free medium typically Macrophage-SFM from Gibco, Grand Island
- CsA cyclosporine
- KT5926 a calmodulin dependent kinase inhibitor
- the calmodulin dependent kinase(s) inhibitor KT5926 strongly inhibited CD 14 downregulation but had less marked effects on B7.1 and B7.2 upregulation.
- inhibitors of other enzymes KT5823, KT5926, chelethyrine chloride have much less effect on A23187 activation.
- Agents which increase the intracellular calcium concentration by blocking calcium export out of the cytoplasm also induce the expression of an activated myeloid dendritic cell phenotype.
- Most cell types normally pump cytoplasmic calcium ions from the cytoplasm of the cell to the exterior of the cell (across the plasma membrane) as well as into membrane-bound intracellular storage sites through an energy-dependent process.
- normal resting cells have low cytoplasmic concentrations of [Ca + + ] relative to the cell exterior, as well as to interior sequestration sites.
- the primary known pharmacologic effect of calcium ionophores is the permeabilizatio ⁇ of cell membranes to calcium ions, which leads to "leakiness" of the cell membrane, and the inability of the cell to keep cytoplasmic calcium concentrations low.
- the drug thapsigargin which inteferes with the calcium pumping mechanism of cells, is able to induce both monocytes and the myeloid leukemia cell line HL60 to express the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells.
- Thapsigargin was added to cultures of human peripheral blood monocytes (prepared as describe in more detail below) or the human myeloid-origin leukemia line, HL-60, which has a response to calcium ionophore treatment very similar to that of monocytes. Thapsigargin was added to cultured human peripheral blood monocytes and HL-60 cells in concentrations ranging from 0 to 1000nM. Cells were harvested 24 hours later and evaluated for the acquisition of ADC immunophenotypic characteristics by FACS analysis.
- thapsigargin had dose-dependent effects on both monocytes and HL-60 which were strikingly similar to those of ionophore, albeit of a somewhat lower magnitude.
- Upregulation of CD80, CD86, CD40, HLA- DR, HLA-ABC, ICAM-1, and CD83 were observed in human monocytes at a 750nM dose of thapsigargin that were about 50% the magnitude observed with an optimal (750ng/ml) dose of A23187.
- Thapsigargin also downregulated monocyte CD 14 expression about 75% as effectively as ionophore.
- HL-60 cells posted an optimal response to thapsigargin at a 250nM dose, and likewise showed enhanced expression of CD80, CD86, and ICAM-1. Levels achieved were 50-75% of those observed with ionophore. HL-60 cells do not constiutively express CD14.
- both calcium ionophore treatment and treatment with agents which increase intracellular calcium levels by interfering with the calcium pumping mechanisms of cells induce both monocytes and myeloid leukemia cells to express the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells.
- agents which increase intracellular calcium levels are capable of inducing monocytes to express the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells.
- chemokines which have been demonstrated by others to induce monocyte chemotaxis (a process which involves localized subcellular [Ca t + ] fluxes which induce the monocyte to move in that particular direction), such as MIP-1 -alpha, MCP-1 and RANTES, as well as chemotactic peptides such as f-MET-LEU-PHE, do not induce monocytes to express the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells, as described in Example 15 below.
- the methods of the present invention involve contacting monocytes with an agent having the ability to raise the intracellular calcium concentration to a level effective to induce the expression of an activated myeloid dendritic cell phenotype.
- chemokines listed above e.g., 1-100 ng/ml MIP-1-alpha
- Calcium-chelation luminescence spectrophotometry was utilized to measure intracellular calcium fluxes in monocytes. Monoytes were incubated with 5 uM/ml indol, a calcium chelating agent which emits fluorescence at different wavelengths (405 or 480 nm) depending on whether or not it is bound to cycloplasmic calcium. Increased calcium mobilization causes relative shifts in emission from one wavelength to the other. After 30 minute incubation with indol, monocytes were washed, pulsed with a variety of agents such as calcium ionophore, virus, f-MET-LEU-PHE, or LPS. To measure calcium fluxes at subsequent time intervals, cells were stimulated with a 355 nM wavelength beam, and fluorescence emission measured at 405 and 480 nm.
- cytoplasmic calcium fluxes are demonstrable in monocytes when they are treated with agents which result in overnight acquisition of the signature immunophenotypic changes associated with calcium mobilization treatment.
- agents specifically described above which produce intracellular calcium levels effective to induce monocytes or other myeloid cells to express the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells
- other treatments will also produce intracellular calcium levels effective to induce monocytes or other myeloid cells to express that phenotype.
- CD40 ligand in combination with cytokines such as IFN- gamma or GM-CSF treatment may be used to induce monocytes or myeloid cells to express the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells.
- CD40 ligand (CD40L) is markedly upregulated on T cells following minimal activating signals such as T cell receptor (TCR) engagement (REF: Nishioka, U. and P.E. Lipsky. 1994. The role of CD40-CD40 ligand interaction in human T cell-B- cell collaboration. J. Immunol. 153: 1027).
- Crosslinking of CD40L on T cells with the reciprocal molecule, CD40, on B cells results in marked calcium mobilization in B cells leading to proliferation; this effect on B cells can be blocked with FK506, a drug which like Cyclosporine A (CsA) also blocks the enzyme calcineurin (Gerry, G, B. Klaus, M.S.K. Choi and M. Holman. 1994.
- mice CD40 Ligation of CD40 activates B cells via a Ca + t -dependent, FK506-sensitive pathway. Eur. J. Immunol. 24:3229). Other investigators have demonstrated that peripheral blood dendritic cells can further be activated through CD40L stimulation and CD34 positive progenitor cells can also be made to differentiate with CD40L stimulation. However, no one has demonstrated differentiation effects on monocytes or linked stimulation of dendritic cells or CD34 positive progenitor cells by CD40L to increased intracellular calcium levels. Flores-Romo, L. et al. J. Ex. Med. 1997 185:341-349; Caux, C. et al. J. Ex. Med. 1994 180:1263-1272.
- Example 17 demonstrates that CD40 ligand may be used to induce monocytes to develop the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells.
- Monocytes were cultured at 3 or 6 x 10 6 cells per well in 24 cluster plates in Gibco serum-free medium containing 20 ng/ml rhGM-CSF. At 20 hours either calcium ionophore (150- 225 ng/ml) or I munex rhCD40L treatment was begun. In either case monocytes were cultured for an additional 20 hours, then harvested for FACS analysis. As shown in Figure 9, after 20 hours culture in either A23187 or CD40L a similar degree of B7.1 and B7.2 upregulation had occurred. Similar upregulation of these markers was also observed at 45, 15, and 5 microgm/ml CD40L, whether added in soluble form or preimmobilized on plastic (not shown).
- Figure 11 demonstrates that the upregulation of B7.1 in response to CD40L appears to at least partially involve the calcineurin pathway.
- rhGM-CSF was omitted, and cells were cultured in Gibco serum-free medium for 20 hours.
- CD40L was added at a variety of concentrations and the levels of control markers (column A) or B7.1 and CD14 (column B) were measured.
- the calcineurin inhibitor cyclosporine A (0.5 microgm/ml) was added to selected samples 45 minutes before addition of CD40L.
- CD40L-mediated induction of the activated myeloid dendritic cell phenotype may be more effective for mature cells than for immature cells.
- 20 hour treatment with either CD40L (10-40 microgm/ml) or ionophore (375 ng/ml A23187) induces most cultured CD34 pos stem cells (which are "immature" monocyte/DC precursors) to acquire dendritic processes when transferred to polylysine-coated glass slides (not shown).
- CD34 pos stem cells which are "immature" monocyte/DC precursors
- only calcium ionophore treatment also resulted in marked expression of the activation molecules B7.1, B7.2 and CD83 in CD34 pos stem cells.
- the stem cells even though they express CD40L and clearly have morphologic effects from the CD40L treatment, are not at a stage of maturity which allows them to derive the full activation effect obtained in contrast during calcium ionophore treatment.
- Monocytes prepared by methods other than countercurrent centrifugal elutriation can also be induced to express the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells.
- the simple method described in Example 18 below may also be used to prepare monocytes which are to be induced to express the phenotype of activated dendritic cells.
- peripheral bllod cells comprising monocytes and other mononuclear cells are obtained. If desired, the monocytes in the preparation of peripheral blood mononuclear may be enriched using techniques such as adherence.
- PBMC peripheral blood mononuclear cell
- Wells were either untreated or treated with calcium ionophore A23187 750 ng/ml, and harvested 20 hours later.
- Recovered cells in the untreated group contained variable mixtures of monocytes and contaminant lymphocytes which could be distinguished on FACS analysis by their different size and granule content (forward and side scatter analysis).
- the monocyte subpopulation was CD14 P0S , and had a profile of B7.1, B7.2, HLA-DR, HLA-ABC, and CD83 expression to similar to that observed for untreated elutriated monoytes.
- the A23187-treated group demonstrated uniform CD14 downregulation, as well as upregulated B72, HLA-DR, and CD40 expression, and de novo B7.1 and CD83 expression.
- the monocyte subpopulation present in mixed peripheral blood mononuclear cell (PBMC) fractions also respond to calcium ionophore (Cl) treatment in a manner analogous to elutriated monocytes.
- PBMC peripheral blood mononuclear cell
- PBMC peripheral blood mononuclear cells
- the response of this subpopulation to ionophore treatment was identical to the response of calcium ionophore-treated purified monocytes: e.g., downregulation of CD14 to a background level, seven fold increased B7.1 expression, 10 fold increased B7.2 expression, 4.5 fold increased ICAM-1 expression, 9 fold increased HLA-DR expression, 7 fold increased CD40 expression, and 11 fold increased CD83 expression.
- the monocyte subpopulation within the calcium ionophore-treated group of PBMC responded similarly to calcium ionophore treated elutriated monocytes. Therefore, unenriched monocytes within PBMC fractions (obtainable from leukapheresis or heparinized syringes) can acquire an activated DC immunophenotype following calcium ionophore treatment, and may serve even in this less enriched state as a useful source of antigen-presenting cells.
- the upregulated expression of costimulatory and MHC molecules on lymphocytes also present during treatment may further contribute to the antigen-presenting potency of calcium ionophore treated PBMC.
- biological agents may also induce monocytes or other myeloid cells to express the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells.
- monocytes or other myeloid cells may also induce monocytes or other myeloid cells to express the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells.
- adenovirus infection induces monocytes to express the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells.
- monocytes were cultured 20-40 hours with a wide MOI concentraiton dose range of adenovirus (strain Ad TK5), then assayed for acquisition of activated DC (ADC) characteristics.
- strain Ad TK5 adenovirus
- ADC activated DC
- Such adenovirus treatment induced typical ADC characteristics overnight, including de novo CD83 and CD80 expression, upregulated B7.2, CD40, ICAM-2 and HLA-DR exprssion, downregulated CD14 expression. This effect could be demonstrated for several different adenovirus preparations, including E1 and E3 replication deficeint mutants.
- E1 and E3 replication deficeint mutants include E1 and E3 replication deficeint mutants.
- sublethal concentrations of virus 250 MOI or greater
- beta-galactosidase expression from the Lac Z gene were also most effective for causing induction of activated DC (ADC) characteristics.
- a number of other agents can modulate the ability of agents which increase the intracellular calcium concentration to induce the expression of an activated dendritic cell phenotype.
- monocytes treated with calcium ionophore alone have superior antigen-presenting efficiency compared to untreated monocytes and can consistently induce rapid primary autologous T cell sensitization to a variety of antigens, including the HLA-A2.1 restricted melanoma-associated peptide MART1.
- monocytes treated with ionophore alone cannot always induce rapid sensitization to other peptides, such as the HLA-A2.1 ovarian-cancer associated HER2neu (369-377) peptide. It is therefore useful to enhance ionophore's effects to improve efficiency of T cell sensitization.
- T lymphocytes such as tolerance or apoptosis, rather than sensitization.
- the first category was agents which had no or little effect alone but which enhanced the induction of an activated myeloid dendritic cell phenotype when added to calcium ionophore treatment.
- agents include endotoxin (0.1-1 ng/ml dose range) and amphotericin B.
- the second category was agents which had multiple modulating effects when the agent was added to monocytes without ionophore, but which enhanced CD 14 downregulation and upregulation of costimulatory, MHC, and other molecule expression when added in combination with calcium ionophore. These agents do not typically result in selective enhancement of single dendritic cell markers, but rather enhance a wide spectrum of ionophore effects.
- agents in this category are rhGM-CSF, rhlL-4, rhlL-12, rhlL-2, rhTNFalpha; rhlFN-gamma, okadaic acid (inhibitor of protein phosphatases I and HA), staurosporine (inhibitor of serine-threonine kinase), dibutryl cGMP (cGMP analog), and 2'5'-DDA (adenylate cyclase antagonist).
- agents in this group were biologic "im unosuppressive" agents such as rhlL-10, glucocorticoids (prednisolone), prostaglandins (PGE2), TGF-beta, pharmacologic agents including cyclosporine A (calcineurin antagonist), KT5926 and KN62 (calmodulin-dependent kinase inhibitors), trifluoperazine and W- 7(calmodulin inhibitor), herbimycin A (tyrosine kinase inhibitor), forskolin (adenylase cyclase activator), dibutryl cAMP (adenylate cyclase analog), KT5823 (protein kinase G antagonist), and KT720 (protein kinase A antagonist).
- biologic "im unosuppressive" agents such as rhlL-10, glucocorticoids (prednisolone), prostaglandins (PGE2), TGF-beta, pharmacologic agents including cyclosporine A
- the fourth group comprises agents which have to date had little or no effect on ionophore-induced monocyte differentiation.
- agents include chelerythrine chloride (protein kinase C antagonist) rhlL-1 alpha, rhlL-6.
- cytokine combinations (rhlL4, rhGMSF, and rhTNF-alpha ) were selected which have been shown by other investigators to induce monocytes to differentiate into dendritic cells over a seven day period (as opposed to the more rapid differentiation described above which is achieved with calcium ionophore) (Pickl et al,. J. Immunol. 157:3850, 1996; Zhou and Tedder, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U. S. A. 93:2588, 1996).
- the antibiotic amphotericin B which is normally a component of our culture medium, was omitted and the endogenous endotoxin content of the culture medium was estimated to be below stimulatory range (under 0.1 ng/ml).
- Monocyte predominant elutriation fractions were thawed and cultured in our standard culture medium with 10% AB human serum, (with amphotericin B omitted, low endotoxin conditions), under each of the following conditions: (a) no additive; (b) A23187 750 ng/ml; (c) rhlL4 1000 u/ml; (d) rhlL4 1000 u/ml + rhGM-CSF 100 ng/ml; (e) rhlL4 1000 u/ml, rhGM-CSF 100 ng/ml and rhTNF-alpha 100 u/ml.
- CsA Cyclosporine A
- A23187 treatment at 20 hours were similar to but of a slightly lower magnitude than than typically seen when 0.5-2 ug amphotericin B or 0.1-1 mg/ml endotoxin is also added to the medium.
- CD14 expression was downregulated 90% following 20 hours of A23187 treatment, but downregulated only 0-20% with any of the above cytokine treatments.
- B7.1 expression increased 14 fold following A23187 treatment, but only 3.4-7.3 fold following the cytokine treatments.
- B7.2 expression increased 7.5 fold following A23187 treatment, but only 1.7-3.7 fold following the cytokine treatments.
- HLA-DR increased 2.9 fold following A23187 treatment, but only 1.1-2.1 fold following the cytokine treatments.
- HLA-ABC expression increased 3.0 fold following A23187 treatment, but did not markedly change (0.8-1.3 fold difference) following the cytokine treatments.
- CD83 expression increased 8.7 fold and was uniform following A23187 treatment, but increased less (3.2-5.5 fold) and was only heterogeneously expressed following the cytokine treatments.
- HLA-DQ expression increased 3.4 fold following A23187 treatment, and also to a similar degree (2.3-5.2 fold) following the cytokine treatments.
- 0.5 ug/ml Cyclosporine A (CsA) had marked inhibitory effects (50% or greater) on several effects induced by calcium ionophore treatment; B7.2 upregulation was inhibited 79% and B7.1 upregulation was inhibited 56%. In contrast, the B7.1 and B7.2 upregulation observed following the cytokine treatments (without ionophore) was either enhanced or only modestly suppressed (always ⁇ 40%) by CsA.
- Monocytes were cultured for 40 hours either without treatment, calcium ionophore A23187 (750 ng/ml) or A23187 plus a cytokine cocktail of rhlL-2 (300 lU/ml), rhlL-12 (20 ng/ml) and rhGMCSF (20 ng/ml). After 40 hours, the cells were pulsed with a tumor derived HER2neu (369-377) peptide for two hours, harvested, then FACS analyzed or cocultured for 8-10 days with naive autologous CD8 + T cells to determine whether rapid sensitization to the HER2neu peptide could be achieved.
- a tumor derived HER2neu 369-377
- T cell sensitization to HER2neu peptide could not be achieved with either untreated monocytes or monocytes treated with calcium ionophore alone, as evidenced by a lack of specific IFN-gamma secretion when harvested T cells were cultured with appropriate HER2neu-pulsed stimulator cells.
- monocytes treated with the combination of ionophore, rGM-CSF, ML- 2, and rlL-12 were more consistently effective for inducing T cell sensitization to the peptide.
- agents which enhance calcium ionophore's upregulation of costimulatory, MHC and other molecules on monocytes can further improve antigen-presenting function.
- Cells having such further improved antigen presenting ability may be preferred for treating certain conditions via T cell sensitization.
- HL-60 leukemia cells which respond to calcium ionophore in a manner analogous to monocytes as described above, were variously treated as follows: no treatment, rhGM-CSF (20 ng/ml) and IFN-gamma (1000 u/ml); A23187 (180 ng/ml) alone; A23187, rhGM-CSF and IFN-gamma combination; each of the preceding with or without Cyclosporine A 0.5 uG/ml. Cells were harvested after three days, irradiated (3000R), then FACS analyzed or cocultured in graded numbers with freshly prepared naive (CD45R0 negative) T lymphocytes. Allosensitization was assessed by pulsing at day 4 with 3 H-TdR and harvesting 18 hours later.
- Ionophore treatment resulted in a typical effect on HL-60, including marked upregulation of costimulatory molecules B7.1, B7.2, and ICAM-1.
- GM-CSF and IFN-gamma without ionophore upregulated MHC Class II but had no induction of costimulatory molecules.
- the combination of ionophore and cytokines enhanced MHC Class I expression compared to ionophore alone, and induced MHC Class II expression as well as costimulatory molecule expression.
- CsA treatment obliterated the allostimulatory capacity of the both ionophore treated groups, consistent with its blockade of costimulatory molecule expression.
- CsA treatment resulted in little or no blockade of ionophore/IFN-gamma's upregulation of HLA-DR, indicating it caused "mixed" modulations on HL-60 activation.
- the antigen presenting activity of myeloid cells such as HL-60 cells and monocytes may be positively or negatively modulated to create a desired cellular phenotype having desired immunological characteristics.
- myeloid cells such as HL-60 cells and monocytes
- monocytes may be positively or negatively modulated to create a desired cellular phenotype having desired immunological characteristics.
- Several frequent media ingredients -the antibiotic amphotericin B and endotoxin in the 0.1-1 ng/ml range (often present in antigens or serum in media) enhance calcium ionophore's effect.
- Other potential media ingredients including glucocorticoid hormones, prostaglandins E1/E2, IL-10, TGF-beta.
- CsA calcineurin inhibitor cyclosporine A
- bone marrow myeloid progenitor cells can also be induced to express the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells.
- Current evidence indicates that circulating monocytes and immature DC are at least some of the time derived from a common bone marrow progenitor cell (Caux et al, J. Exp. Med. 754695, 1996; Szabolcs et al, Blood 57:4520, 1996).
- the earliest stage of cell differentiation commonly isolable for bone marrow progenitors is the CD34 pos cell. This cell type, sometimes termed a "stem cell,” can be isolated from bone marrow, neonatal cord blood, or from peripheral adult blood.
- Isolated CD34 p ° s cells are typically cultured for the first five to seven days in stem cell factor (SCF, or c-KIT ligand) to promote rapid proliferation; concomitant addition of rhGM-CSF has been shown to favor expansion of myeloid progenitors; concomitant addition of rhTNF-alpha has been shown to favor or sustain DC differentiation. Proliferation is largely complete by day 7 of culture, but differentiation continues for the next week.
- SCF stem cell factor
- bone marrow-derived CD34 pos cells When cultured for a total of 12-14 days with these three cytokines, bone marrow-derived CD34 pos cells develop into a mixed, predominantly myeloid population consisting of neutrophils (approximately 70%), monocytes (15%), inactive DC (10%), and activated DC (5%) (Szabolcs et al, Blood 57:4520, 1996).
- circulating monocytes, DC, and myeloid leukemia cells each respond to calcium mobilization by rapidly acquiring the phenotype of an activated myeloid dendritic cell.
- Example 24 below demonstrates that bone marrow myeloid progenitor cells can also be induced to express the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells.
- Example 24 Bone marrow-derived highly purified CD34 os cells were cultured for six days in medium containing 20% fetal calf serum, rhSCF, rhGM-CSF, and rhTNF-alpha. Proliferation during this period resulted in approximately six-fold expansion. Cells were centrifuged and replated in 24 well plates in fresh medium containing rhGM-CSF, and rhTNF-alpha but not rhSCF. In addition, individual wells were treated with varied doses of ionophore A23187. Wells were harvested 1, 2, and 6 days subsequently, subjected to FACS analysis or studied morphologically for DC characteristics utilizing polylysine-coated glass slides and Nomarski optics.
- This immunophenotype consisted of nearly uniform ( > 85% of cells), marked upregulation of B7.1, B7.2, ICAM-1, CD83, CD40 and CD1 a; in addition, these cells expressed high levels of HLA-DR and HLA-ABC. Within 40 hours of treatment virtually all cells manifested dendritiform morphology.
- pluripotent bone marrow myeloid progenitors have a capacity to rapidly commit and differentiate to an activated dendritic cell phenotype following calcium mobilization which closely parallels that of human peripheral blood monocytes.
- B7.1 , B7.2, CD40, ICAM-1 and CD83 which may be critical for antigen presentation.
- myeloid-origin cells such as monocytes, dendritic cells, and their bone marrow precursors.
- One aspect of the present invention is a method of using an agent which increases the intracellular calcium level, such as a calcium ionophore, to treat a subject suffering from leukemia comprising obtaining leukemia cells from the subject, contacting the cells with the agent which increases the intracellular calcium level, contacting the cells with an agent which prevents the cells from proliferating, and reintroducing the induced cells back into the subject.
- the step of obtaining leukemia cells from the subject comprises obtaining leukemia cells from a subject suffering from chronic myeloid leukemia.
- the leukemia cells may be obtained from the peripheral blood of the subject.
- CML chronic myeloid leukemia
- chromic myeloid leukemia remains autologous or allogeneic bone marrow transplant with only about a 50% 5 year survival. Most patients are unable to obtain a bone marrow transplant. It is therefore of interest to potentially develop new less toxic therapies for treatment of this disease.
- Example 25 and 26 below demonstrate that lymphocytes and endothelial cells to respond at least partially to calcium ionophore treatment.
- myeloid leukemia lines and leukemia cells obtained from individuals suffering from chronic myeloid leukemia can respond to calcium mobilization treatment analogously to normal myeloid cells, and it is likely that tumors of many different tissue types may also manifest similar features, at least in part.
- Example 25 Myeloid leukemia cell lines display marked upregulation of molecules linked to antigen-presentation and acquire increased T cell sensitizing capacity following calcium mobilization with either calcium ionophore or thapsigargin.
- the response of HL-60 cells to optimal doses of calcium ionophore or thapsigargin is many ways kinetically analogous to the response of peripheral blood monoytes.
- uniform de novo expression of CD83, ICAM-1, B7.1, and B7.2 occurs.
- CD83 expression declines whereas costimulatory molecule expression is relatively sustained.
- increased expression of CD40 and CD 1a, as well as increased acquisition of dendritiform morphologic characteristics occurs between day 2 and day 4 of treatment.
- HL-60 cells express HLA-ABC but lack HLA-DR, and the latter is not induced by calcium ionophore treatment alone.
- rhlFN-gamma treatment induces HLA-DR expression, which is markedly enhanced by calcium ionophore treatment;
- rhGM-CSF treatment has little effect alone, but enhances and/or sustains ionophore's upregulation of CD1 a and B7.2.
- HL-60 cells treated with all three agents displayed by far the most potent T cell sensitization capacity, consistent with their superior expression of costimulatory and MHC molecules.
- calcium mobilization activates immuophenotypic and functional properties of efficient antigen- presenting cells in at least some malignancies of myeloid origin.
- CML cells were obtained from 8 donors' peripheral blood and the CD33+ CML cells were separated from contaminating T cells, B cells, NK cells, and monocytes by negative selection using immunomagnetic beads.
- CD33+ (myeloid) cells were freshly obtained they expressed MHC Class I and moderate CD54 (ICAM-1), but little if any MHC Class II, B7.1 (CD80), B7.2 (CD86), CD40, and CD83 (not shown).
- CML cells markedly increased expression of MHC Class I, II, B7.1, B7.2, CD40, CD83, and CD54. These changes occurred within the first 48 hours in culture.
- the addition of cytokines GM-CSF, IL-2, and IL-12 enhanced the expression of theses molecules (not shown).
- CML cells obtained from different donors were treated with calcium ionophore and their ability to allosensitize purified CD4+ cells was measured and compared to untreated CML cells, and, in some instances, to treated and untreated purified CD14+ monocytes.
- CML cells treated with calcium ionophors exhibited a dramatically increased ability to primarily stimulate proliferation of purified CD4+ T cells when compared to untreated CML cells.
- CML cells treated with Cl stimulated T cell proliferation in some donors to the same level as purified CD14+ monocytes treated with Cl which we have shown to be equivalent to blood purified DC (Czerniecki et. al. 1997, supra). These results demonstrate that CML cells exposed to agents which raise the intracellular calcium levels are able to induce T cell proliferation.
- FIG. 15 A-G and Figure 16 A-G show the results of experiments in which the expression of MHC Class I, MHC Class II, CD80, CD86, CD40, CD54 and CD83 was measured using CML cells obtained from two different donors.
- the CML cells were untreated with calcium ionophore (No Tx), treated with cyclosporin A but not calcium ionophore (No Tx+CSA), treated with calcium ionophore (Cl) or treated with calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A (CI+CSA).
- No Tx calcium ionophore
- No Tx+CSA calcium ionophore
- Cl calcium ionophore
- CI+CSA calcium ionophore and cyclosporin A
- Fluoresence in situ hybridization (FISH) experiments demonstrated that the cells treated with Cl that become activated have the same numbers of cells with bcr/abl translocation as the untreated CD33+ cells demonstrating that the Cl treated CD33+ cells are truly derived from leukemic cells (not shown).
- the treated CML cells may be used as an autologous vaccine by treating them with calcium ionophores, CD40 ligand, or other agents which increase the intracellular calcium level.
- the leukemia cells are obtained from a subject, contacted with the agent which increases intracellular calcium levels, and reintroduced into the subject.
- endothelial cells may also be induced to express CD40 and ICAM-1 in response to calcium ionophore treatment.
- Endothelial cells were previously isolated from human umbilical vein (HUVEC), then cultured in IMEM with
- CD40 expression but failed to express detectable B7.1, B7.2, HLA-DR or CD83 either with or without ionophore treatment.
- HLA-ABC expression was present but unchanged by calcium ionophore treatment.
- Human lymphocytes upregulate molecules associated with improve antigen-presenting capacity following calcium ionophore treatment.
- monocytes present as a 15% subpopulation of unfractionated PBMC achieved differentiation to an activated dendritic cell phenotype during calcium ionophore treatment even without further purification.
- calcium ionophore on other subpopulations within the PBMC. The results are described in Example 27 below.
- Example 27 PBMC were prepared by leukapheresis and Ficoll-Hypaque and placed in culture. Since the cells were never elutriated and no adherence step was performed, these cultures included large numbers of T, B, and NK lymphocytes as well as monocytes.
- the medium was our standard RPMI 10% human AB serum with antibiotics including amphotericin B. Cells were either untreated or treated for 40 hours with calcium ionophore A23187 750 mg/ml. Cells were then harvested and analyzed by FACS.
- Cells were stained with FITC conjugated anti- CD3, anti-CD40, anti-CD57, anti-CD 14, or the combination; in addition cells were stained with PE conjugated control antibodies, anti-B7.1, anti-B7.2, etc. In this way the effect of calcium ionophore treatment on each parameter could be clearly delineated.
- the T lymphocyte subpopulation within the PBMC was 62-72% of the recovered cells; calcium ionophore treatment had marked effects on the T cell subpopulation, including B7.2 upregulation (10 fold increase over culture without ionophore), ICAM-1 upregulation (3.3 fold) HLA-DR (6 fold), and CD40 (4 fold).
- the B cell subpopulation was 8-11 % of the total, and although overall upregulation of surface markers was of a lower magnitude than for T cells, a subpopulation of B cells developed marked B71 and B72 expression during calcium ionophore treatment.
- the NK subpopulation (22-23% of total PBMC) displayed negligible upregulation of surface markers in response to calcium ionophore.
- a large subpopulation of T lymphocytes and smaller subpopulation of B lymphocytes respond to calcium ionophore treatment by upregulation of surface costimulatory, MHC, and/or other molecules which may result in improved antigen presentation.
- Such upregulation may provide usefully enhanced antigen-presenting activity when PBMC are calcium-ionophore treated to create a source of activated dendritic cells.
- tumors of lymphoid origin including leukemias and lymphomas, may upregulate such molecules analogously to the myeloid leukemia HL60's upregulation of ADC-associated markers.
- autologous dendritic cells or monocytes which have been induced to develop the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells may be used to treat cancer.
- activated dendritic cells as a cancer treatment has met with some success. Hsu, F.J. et al., Natl. Med. 1996 2:52-58.
- Dendritic cell or monocyte enriched fractions, or combinations of dendritic cells and monocytes are isolated from a patient in need of treatment for prostate cancer by leukapheresis, citrate buffer rinse and CCE as described above. Multiple elutriation fractions are collected to maximize the separation of lymphocytes, monocytes and dendritic cell, and neutrophil contaminated fractions. After pooling all post 140 fractions which are not significantly contaminated with neutrophils, the cells in the pooled fractions are contacted with an agent which increases the intracellular calcium concentration, such as 750 mg/ml A23187 in 10% serum from a donor having an AB blood type.
- an agent which increases the intracellular calcium concentration such as 750 mg/ml A23187 in 10% serum from a donor having an AB blood type.
- the 120, 140, 150, 170, 190, 200 and rotor off fractions may be pooled and induced.
- the pooled fractions are then incubated for 40 hours with a prostate tumor cell lysate from prostate cancer cells previously obtained from a biopsy of the patient. This incubation activates the dendritic cells and monocytes which have been induced to express the phenotype of activated myeloid dendritic cells to present prostate tumor cell antigens.
- peripheral blood mononuclear cell preparations obtained as described above may be induced with agents which increase the intracellular calcium level, such as calcium ionophores, to enhance their antigen presenting activity.
- agents which increase the intracellular calcium level such as calcium ionophores, to enhance their antigen presenting activity.
- the cells are then incubated with the prostate tumor antigens, causing them to present the tumor antigen.
- bone marrow myeloid progenitor cells are incubated with agents which increase the intracellular calcium level, such as calcium ionophores, to enhance their antigen presenting activity.
- agents which increase the intracellular calcium level such as calcium ionophores, to enhance their antigen presenting activity.
- the cells are then incubated with the prostate tumor antigens, causing them to present the tumor antigen. After incubation in the presence of the prostate tumor antigens, the cells are reintroduced into the patient.
- the cells may be introduced into the patient intravenously or via any route which enables the cells to present antigent to immune cells, which generate then generate an immune response. Three weeks later, a reduction in the size of the prostate tumor is noticed due to activation of the patient's immune system via the introduced, activated dendritic cells.
- this is one example of a possible antigen that could be used in the present technique, one of ordinary skill in the art will recognize that other similar antigens could also function effectively.
- dendritic cells can be challenged with antigens from the surface of HIV-1, or other disease-carrying agent and then reintroduced into a patient that has AIDS.
- disease-carrying agents such as cancer cells of the breast, brain, liver or stomach are also anticipated to function effectively to activate dendritic cells to present tumor antigens in the methods of the present invention.
- the physician can stimulate an anti-cancer antigen response in vitro, and then reintroduce the patients own antigen-presenting dendritic cells as a method of increasing the immune response to the tumor cells.
- myeloid and lymphoid cells upregulate cell surface markers involved in antigen presentation when the level of intracellular calcium is elevated. This phenomenon may be exploited to treat both myeloid and lymphoid leukemias as described in Example 29 below.
- Example 29
- Lyphoid or myeloid leukemia cells are obtained from the peripheral blood of a subject using the techniques described above. Thereafter, the cells are contacted with an agent, such as a calcium ionophore, which increases the intracellular calcium level, thereby inducing the expression of cell surface markers which increase the antigen presenting ability of the cells. The induced cells are then treated with gamma irradiation or agents which prevent them from proliferating and transferred back into the subject from which they were taken. The induced cells present leukemia specific antigens to the immune system of the subject, generating an immune response which kills the leukemic cells and produces an improvement in the clinical condition of the subject. Preferred features of the present invention have been described above. However, the true scope of the invention is not limited to only those embodiments illustrated in the Detailed Description, but should only be limited by the scope of the following claims.
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AU8274698A (en) | 1999-01-19 |
JP2002511870A (en) | 2002-04-16 |
WO1999000137A3 (en) | 2000-01-06 |
EP0998298A2 (en) | 2000-05-10 |
AU2002300335A1 (en) | 2002-12-19 |
US6010905A (en) | 2000-01-04 |
AU2002300335A8 (en) | 2002-12-19 |
AU2002300335B2 (en) | 2005-04-07 |
CA2295229A1 (en) | 1999-01-07 |
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