Role of naive and memory T cells in tumor cell lysis mediated by bi-specific antibodies

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Abstract

Bispecific monoclonal antibodies (Bi-mAb) with specificity for a tumor associated antigen and the CD3 or CD28 antigen on T lymphocytes, respectively, induce activation of resting T lymphocytes and target specific tumor cell lysis. Former studies had confirmed that T cells expressing the CD45RO 'memory' antigen at high levels were the most potent effectors of Bi-mAb-mediated cytotoxicity when compared to their 'naive' counterparts expressing the CD45RA antigen. Further analysis of the T cell subpopulations revealed that within the memory T cell pool, CD8+ T cells were the effector cell population with strongest, cytolytic activity. The cytolytic activity was correlated with the expression level of perforin and granzymes B mRNA. Ca2+ complexing agents, which abrogate perforin activity, reduced necrosis, while inhibition of granzyme activity in effector or target-cells had a similar effect on apoptosis. These results confirm the crucial role perforin and granzymes play in target-cell lysis and explain why CD8+CD45RO+ T cells activated by combined CD3 and CD28 antigen triggering represent the T cell pool with highest cytolytic potential.

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APA

Renner, C., Held, G., Ohnesorge, S., Bauer, S., Gerlach, K., Pfitzenmeier, J. P., & Pfreundschuh, M. (1997). Role of naive and memory T cells in tumor cell lysis mediated by bi-specific antibodies. Immunobiology, 197(1), 122–132. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0171-2985(97)80062-9

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