Studies on therapeutic vaccination and immune evasion in chronic lymphocytic leukemia
Abstract
Chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) is characterized by an accumulation of malignant B cells in blood, bone marrow and secondary lymphoid organs and is considered incurable. Our main aims were to investigate different aspects of the cellular immunology in order to develop immunotherapeutic strategies. First, the function of cytotoxic T cells (CTL) in CLL seems to be negatively related to disease stage. In paper I, we investigated if natural killer (NK) cell inhibitory receptors on CTL were differentially expressed and found an increased expression of these receptors on CTL in patients with advanced disease. This dysregulation could potentially contribute to immune evasion and disease progression. In paper IV, a co-operative study of global methylation profiles of stereotyped subsets in CLL, it was found that genes involved in immune response had higher methylation levels in the poor-prognostic subset #1 than the good-prognostic subset #4. High methylation status of those genes correlated with low expression of CD80 and CD86, two co-stimulatory receptors important for T cell immune response. We performed co-culture experiments, where CLL cell lines expressing CD80/86 induced T cell activation. Thus, one explanation for the poor prognosis in subset #1, could be that low CD80/86 expression on CLL cells leads to immune evasion.
It is believed that CLL could be a good candidate for dendritic cell (DC) anti-tumor vaccination. Yet, in earlier clinic trials there has been minimal response. Optimal DC activation requires specific cytokine production and expression of co-stimulatory receptors. Apart from CD80/86, another prominent co-stimulatory receptor is CD70, which plays an important role by promoting T cell survival and effector functions. In paper II and III, we studied two types of DCs matured with different cocktails, the standard PGE2DC and the alternative αDC1, to investigate if effective DCs could be generated from CLL patients. We found that αDC1s produced a NK, NKT and CTL-attracting cytokine profile, which may favor priming of CTL. Also, αDC1s expressed CD70 in a time-dependent manner and their IL-12p70 production, with a subsequent desirable T helper cell type 1 response, appeared to be CD70-associated. Together, these data imply that the αDC1-cocktail induce a more efficient DC activation and function.
In conclusion, our findings describe new mechanisms of immune evasion in CLL and also give further support to the idea that an αDC1-based vaccine has higher immunotherapeutic potential in CLL patients.
Parts of work
I. The expression of NK cell inhibitory receptors on cytotoxic T cells in B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukaemia (B-CLL). Junevik K, Werlenius O, Hasselblom S, Jacobsson S, Nilsson-Ehle H, Andersson PO. Ann Hematol. 2007 Feb;86(2):89-94. Epub 2006 Oct 17 ::PMID::17043777 II. Tumour-loaded α-type 1-polarized dendritic cells from patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia produce a superior NK-, NKT- and CD8+ T cell-attracting chemokine profile.
Gustafsson K, Junevik K, Werlenius O, Holmgren S, Karlsson-Parra A, Andersson PO.
Scand J Immunol. 2011 Sep;74(3):318-26.
::PMID::21595737 III. High functional CD70 expression on α-type 1-polarized dendritic cells from patients with chronic lymphocytic leukaemia. Junevik K, Werlenius O, Fogelstrand L, Karlsson-Parra A, Andersson PO. In manuscript IV. Distinct transcriptional control in major immunogenetic subsets of chronic lymphocytic leukemia exhibiting subset-biased global DNA methylation profiles.
Kanduri M, Marincevic M, Halldórsdóttir AM, Mansouri L, Junevik K, Ntoufa S, Kultima HG, Isaksson A, Juliusson G, Andersson PO, Ehrencrona H, Stamatopoulos K, Rosenquist R.
Epigenetics. 2012 Dec 1;7(12):1435-42. ::PMID::23154584
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Biomedicine. Department of Clinical Chemistry and Transfusion Medicine
Disputation
Fredagen den 27 september 2013, kl. 9.00, Hörsal Kammaren, Sahlgrenska Universitetssjukhus, Vita Stråket 12, Göteborg
Date of defence
2013-09-27
katarina.junevik@vgregion.se
Date
2013-09-10Author
Junevik, Katarina
Keywords
Hematology
Immunology
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-8718-6
Language
eng