Abstract
Abstract 2964
The curative potential of allogeneic transplant for high-risk malignancy is based on the observation that alloreactivity can result in a clinically significant graft-versus-tumor (GVT) effect. However, we have observed that alloreactivity directed against non-tumor restricted miHA's reduces quantitative responses to vaccines targeting tumor-specific antigens. The relative impact of the GVHD-mediating antigen on the potency of the GVT response when the antigen is shared has not been well studied.
A murine allotransplant system in which the clinically relevant GVHD antigen HY drives both graft-versus-host disease and the antitumor response was utilized. Following lethal irradiation, combinations of B6 male (HY-expressing) and female (HY-naïve) donors and recipients were used in T-cell depleted bone marrow transplants to control for HY expression in hematopoetic and non-hematopoetic compartments. Delayed donor lymphocyte infusion (DLI) with female HY-specific transgenic T-cells was then performed which allowed tracking of antigen-specific cells. Mice were subsequently challenged with an immunogenic HY-expressing tumor (MB49). In tumor protection studies, transplant recipients received a male dendritic cell vaccine at the time of DLI. Recipients were monitored for clinical GVHD scoring, weight loss, tumor-free and overall survival. Surface phenotyping of HY-specific CD8 T cells from recipient bone marrow, tumor-draining lymph node (LN) and spleen was performed serially by flow cytometry using congenic markers. Statistical analyses were performed using paired Student t-tests and Kaplan-Meier survival estimates.
Transplantation of female marrow and HY-specific T cells into male recipients produces a mild HY-targeted GVHD, indicated by weight loss and skin GVHD scores. Female recipients of female marrow and HY-specific DLI had 100% survival following HY-expressing tumor challenge. In contrast, male recipients had only 20 +/− 4.7% tumor-free survival (p<0.0001), despite receiving HY-reactive female marrow and HY-specific DLI. Administration of an HY-expressing male dendritic cell vaccine did not improve either tumor growth velocity or tumor-free survival in male recipients. Despite a poor antitumor response in males, expression of HY on nonhematopoetic tissues produced a significant expansion of HY specific T-cells following DLI, regardless of tumor-bearing status (30.5 −77.4% total CD8 from spleen, draining LN and marrow, vs 0.01–1% from female recipient controls, p<0.0001). This suggested that impaired tumor control was due to dysfunction, rather than deletion, of HY-specific T cells. Indeed, nearly 100% of HY-specific CD8 isolated from the spleen, tumor-draining lymph node, and bone marrow of male recipients expressed high levels of PD-1, a phenomenon observed at all time points in tumor-bearing and non tumor-bearing male recipients with HY-directed GVHD. Non-HY specific CD8 cells did not express PD-1 (p<0.0001). Further, HY-specific CD8 from spleen and tumor-draining LN of male recipients display a significantly increased percentage of CD44+CD62L- effector memory (72.4 +/− 17.2%) vs. CD44+CD62L+ central memory (15.9 +/− 9.7%, p= 0.006) cells compared to non-HY specific CD8 cells (26.5% +/− 2.8 % vs. 28.2 +/− 12.7%, p= 0.52) from male and female recipient controls.
In an experimental system where HY is expressed on both recipient nonhematopoetic tissue and tumor, HY-directed alloreactivity impairs the antitumor response despite antigen-specific DLI and effective vaccination. Characterization of alloreactive CD8 T cells in this setting reveals a persistence of effector memory and high levels of PD-1 expression, which suggest T-cell dysfunction as a possible mechanism. Further studies of T-cell dysfunction in this model may identify targets for therapeutic blockade following adoptive immunotherapy with particular relevance to those clinical situations where GVHD does not enhance GVT.
No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.
Author notes
Asterisk with author names denotes non-ASH members.
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