These findings support a role for IL-17 in the immunopathogenesis of acute vascular rejection and demonstrate the potential of IL-17 antagonism for therapy. By contrast, IL-17 antagonism does not appear to prevent ensuing chronic graft vascular disease, in particular neointimal formation.
Innate immune stimulation with Toll-like receptor (TLR) agonists is a proposed modality for immunotherapy of melanoma. Here, a TLR7/8 agonist, 3M-011, was used effectively as a single systemic agent against disseminated mouse B16-F10 melanoma. The investigation of the mechanism of antitumor action revealed that the agonist had no direct cytotoxic effects on tumor cells tested in vitro. In addition, 3M-011 retained its effectiveness in scid/B6 mice and scid/NOD mice, eliminating the requirement for T and B cells, but lost its activity in beige (bg/bg) and NK1.1-immunodepleted mice, suggesting a critical role for natural killer (NK) cells in the antitumor response. NK cytotoxicity was enhanced in vivo by the TLR7/8 agonist; this activation was long lasting, as determined by sustained expression of the activation marker CD69. Also, in human in vitro studies, 3M-011 potentiated NK cytotoxicity. TLR7/8-mediated NK-dependent antitumor activity was retained in IFN-alpha/beta receptor-deficient as well as perforin-deficient mice, while depletion of IFN-gamma significantly decreased the ability of 3M-011 to delay tumor growth. Thus, IFN-gamma-dependent functions of NK cell populations appear essential for cancer immunotherapy with TLR7/8 agonists.
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