News and Research
Immune System
Technique Brings Immune-based Therapies Closer To Reality
4-23-2003
Johns Hopkins researchers have developed an inexpensive,
reliable way to make large quantities of targeted immune
cells that one day may provide a life-saving defense against
cancers and viral infections.
Using
artificial antigen presenting cells, or aAPCs, the scientists
converted run-of-the-mill immune cells into a horde of specific,
targeted invader-fighting machines, they report in the advance
online version of Nature Medicine on April 21.
"The
ability to make vast quantities of targeted, antigen-specific
immune cells in the lab broadens their potential in tackling
a wide array of diseases, especially cancers," says
Jonathan Schneck, Ph.D., professor of pathology and medicine
at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. "Our technique
provides an off-the-shelf way to create these cells."
The
immune system normally defends the body against invaders.
However, in cancer, tumor cells aren't recognized as "foreign,"
and after bone marrow and organ transplant the immune system
has to be suppressed to avoid rejection of the transplant,
opening the door to viral infections. Specially targeted
immune cells that fill these defensive gaps are already
being tested as experimental "cancer vaccines"
in patients with melanoma and multiple myeloma and as virus
fighters after bone marrow transplant.
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However, the technological advance reported by the
Johns Hopkins team overcomes a major weakness of current methods for
making these targeted immune cells, known as antigen-specific cytotoxic
T cells (CTLs) -- namely the methods' reliance on a patient's own
dendritic cells. Dendritic cells are immune system sentries that wave
the proteins, or antigens, of foreign invaders like flags, teaching
immune system T cells to recognize the invading cells and kill them.
"But dendritic cells vary in quality and number
from patient to patient," says first author Mathias Oelke, Ph.D.,
a postdoctoral fellow in pathology at Johns Hopkins. "Many patients
simply can't provide the number of dendritic cells needed to get a
vaccine that would work."
The aAPCs made by the Hopkins team created twice as
many specific, targeted CTLs as using dendritic cells, and could have
made even more, says Oelke, who researched dendritic cell-derived
CTLs in Germany. Both aAPCs and dendritic cells convert generic immune
cells in the blood into targeted CTLs.
The aAPCs were made using a protein called HLA-Ig,
which in 1998 Schneck showed could mimic the antigen-waving ability
of dendritic cells. In the latest research, Oelke turned tiny magnetic
beads into aAPCs by coating them with HLA-Ig and another protein that
stimulates cell growth and exposing the beads to antigens from either
melanoma or cytomegalovirus.
"Using the aAPCs, we were able to make a tremendous
amount of CTLs while maintaining their specificity," says Schneck.
"Losing specificity as CTL numbers rise has been a problem with
other techniques."
Before aAPCs could be used to make CTLs for testing
in patients, the production method must be modified to produce clinical
grade cells, a process Oelke suggests could take two to four years.
Authors on the report are Oelke, Schneck and Dominic
Didiano of Johns Hopkins; Marcela Maus and Carl June of the Abramson
Family Cancer Research Institute at the University of Pennsylvania;
and Andreas Mackensen of the University of Regensburg, Germany. The
Johns Hopkins researchers were funded by the National Institutes of
Health and the Dr. Mildred-Scheel-Stiftung Deutsche Krebshilfe Foundation.
Under a licensing agreement between Pharmingen and
the Johns Hopkins University, Schneck is entitled to a share of royalty
received by the University on sales of products related to technology
described in this article. Schneck is a paid consultant to Pharmingen.
The terms of this arrangement are being managed by The Johns Hopkins
University in accordance with its conflict of interest policies.
This
story has been adapted from a news release issued by Johns Hopkins
Medical Institutions, www.hopkinsmedicine.org.
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