Replicative senescence of T cells is correlated with erosion of telomere ends. Telomerase plays a key role in maintaining telomere length. Therefore, it is thought that telomerase regulates the life span of T cells. To test this hypothesis, we have over-expressed human telomerase reverse transcriptase in human CD8+ T cells. Ectopic expression of human telomerase reverse transcriptase led to immortalization of these T cells, without altering the phenotype and without loss of specificity or functionality. As the T cells remained dependent on cytokines and Ag stimulation for their in vitro expansion, we conclude that immortalization was achieved without malignant transformation.
Human papillomavirus (HPV) type 16 infection is strongly associated with the development of cervical carcinoma (CxCa) in women. The HPV16-derived oncoproteins E6 and E7, responsible for both onset and maintenance of malignant transformation, are expressed constitutively in CxCa cells and represent tumor-associated Ags. As a result, E6 and E7 constitute potential targets for adoptive CTL-mediated immunotherapy of CxCa. However, the availability to date of well-characterized HPV16-specific, CxCa-reactive human CTLs is extremely limited. The current study describes the in vitro generation and isolation of HPV16 E7-specific, CxCa-reactive human CTL clones from low-frequency healthy donor-derived CD8β-positive precursors. For this purpose, an in vitro CTL induction protocol was used involving mature monocyte-derived dendritic cells as stimulator cells loaded with an HLA-A2.1-restricted, E711–20-derived high-affinity altered peptide ligand. A double tetramer-guided isolation procedure and subsequent limiting-dilution cloning resulted in Ag-specific CTL clones. Stringent CTL characterization clearly indicated Ag-specific, HLA-A2.1-restricted reactivity against different HPV16-transformed CxCa cell lines. To allow expansion of E711–20-specific CTL clones to numbers required for prolonged in vitro as well as in vivo application, their life span was significantly extended by ectopic expression of human telomerase reverse transcriptase. Collectively, our results show that optimized CTL induction and stringent CTL selection procedures, followed by human telomerase reverse transcriptase-mediated life span extension will allow continued availability of low-frequency HPV16-specific, CxCa-reactive human CTL clones. This may enhance the prospects of HPV16-specific adoptive CTL immunotherapy in CxCa patients.
We conclude that vaccination with GM-CSF-transduced autologous tumor cells has limited toxicity and can enhance T-cell activation against melanocyte differentiation antigens, which can lead to vitiligo. Whether the induction of autoimmune vitiligo may prolong disease-free survival of metastatic melanoma patients who are surgically rendered as having no evidence of disease before vaccination is worthy of further investigation.
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