IMMUNOBIOLOGY
CD4 cells can be more efficient at tumor rejection than CD8 cells
Ainhoa Perez-Diez,1 Nathalie T. Joncker,3 Kyungho Choi,2 William F. N. Chan,4 Colin C. Anderson,4,5 Olivier Lantz,3
and Polly Matzinger1
From the 1Ghost Lab, 2Laboratory of Cellular and Molecular Immunology, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health,
Bethesda, MD; 3Laboratoire d’Immunologie and U520 Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, Institute Curie, Paris, France; and Departments
of 4Medical Microbiology & Immunology and 5Surgery, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB, Canada
tors, they have generally been studied
mostly for their ability to enhance the
activity of CTL. In this mouse study, we
compared monoclonal populations of tumor-specific CD4 and CD8 T cells as
effectors against several different tumors, and found that CD4 T cells eliminated tumors that were resistant to CD8mediated rejection, even in cases where
the tumors expressed major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I molecules
but not MHC class II. MHC class II expres-
sion on host tissues was critical, suggesting that the CD4 T cells act indirectly.
Indeed, the CD4 T cells partnered with NK
cells to obtain the maximal antitumor
effect. These findings suggest that CD4 T
cells can be powerful antitumor effector
cells that can, in some cases, outperform
CD8 T cells, which are the current “gold
standard” effector cell in tumor immunotherapy. (Blood. 2007;109:5346-5354)
© 2007 by The American Society of Hematology
Introduction
of effector alone, without the effects of potential contaminants. To
our surprise, we found that CD4 cells were actually better than CD8
cells at rejecting tumors in every case we tested (6 different
tumors), even when the CD4 effectors exhibited minimal in vitro or
in vivo lytic activity against the tumor cells, and even when the
tumor expressed major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I
but not class II molecules. Although the CD4 T cells did not require
CD8 T cells, they did partner with other host cells, because the
presence of natural killer (NK) cells was essential for maximum
effectiveness. All together, these results suggest that the antitumor
potential of effector CD4 T cells may have been underestimated.
They may not only be helper cells but also potent effector cells that
can clear a wide variety of tumors.
Researchers designing antitumor vaccines, or treatments involving
transfers of activated antitumor cells, have long focused on
methods to elicit tumor-specific CD8 CTLs, envisioning that their
potent ability to kill tumor targets in vitro and to reject transplants
in vivo would translate into equally potent antitumor activity in
vivo. Although many of the resulting treatments have indeed been
able to elicit CTLs that recognize tumor cells and/or tumor antigens
in vitro, complete tumor regression has been achieved in only a
minority of patients.1-5 Animal models have generated similar
results. In a few cases, the transfer of monoclonal T cell receptor
transgenic (TCR Tg) CD8 T cells was able to clear small tumors,6
but in most, the TCR Tg CD8 cells were ineffective without the
addition of other aids. In short, though CD8 CTL can clear tumors,
they most often do not, unless helped by additional treatments.6-12
Over the last 25 years, a few studies have shown that CD4 T
cells could also clear tumors completely independently of CD8s.13-17
Nevertheless, CD4 T cells continue to be studied mainly for their
role as helpers for CD8 CTL,11,18,19 and it has even been suggested
that tumor-specific CD4 T regulatory cells could act as suppressors
of antitumor responses.20 Thus, their potential as CD8-independent
antitumor effectors has gained only a few proponents,13-17,21-24 and
only a few of the newly designed cancer vaccines incorporate
antigens to stimulate CD4 cells, mostly to enhance their helper
activity.25,26 Most studies using adoptive transfer of tumor-specific
T cells continue to focus entirely on CD8 cells.2,3,27-30
We decided to do a direct comparison between CD4 and CD8 T
cells specific for the same tumor, using TCR Tg mice containing
pure populations of CD4 or CD8 T cells, in order to test each type
We used MB49, an H-2b bladder carcinoma,33 TC-tet, an H-2k pancreatic
-cell tumor,34 TRAMP-C2, an H-2b prostate adenocarcinoma,35 and
Submitted October 10, 2006; accepted February 20, 2007. Prepublished online
as Blood First Edition Paper, February 27, 2007; DOI 10.1182/blood-2006-10051318.
The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by page charge
payment. Therefore, and solely to indicate this fact, this article is hereby
marked ‘‘advertisement’’ in accordance with 18 USC section 1734.
Materials and methods
Mice
The anti-H-Y TCR transgenic mice MataHari, Marilyn, and Rachel and the
H-2b or H-2k CD3KO␥cKO mice have been described previously.31,32 They,
and C57BL/6 (B6), C57BL/10-Rag2KO, and C57BL/10-Rag2KO␥cKO
mice were obtained from Taconic Farms (Germantown, NY) and housed in
specific pathogen-free conditions. The National Institutes of Health is
accredited by the Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care.
Tumor cells
The online version of this article contains a data supplement.
An Inside Blood analysis of this article appears at the front of this issue.
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© 2007 by The American Society of Hematology
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Researchers designing antitumor treatments have long focused on eliciting tumor-specific CD8 cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) because of their potent killing
activity and their ability to reject transplanted organs. The resulting treatments,
however, have generally been surprisingly poor at inducing complete tumor
rejection, both in experimental models
and in the clinic. Although a few scattered
studies suggested that CD4 T “helper”
cells might also serve as antitumor effec-
BLOOD, 15 JUNE 2007 䡠 VOLUME 109, NUMBER 12
WR21, an H-2b salivary gland adenocarcinoma.36 IP2-E4, 3B-11, and
2F-2B are H-2k tumor cell lines obtained from a single C3H/HeJ endothelioma.37 2F-2B and B16, an H-2b melanoma, are negative for H-Y. WR21,
TRAMP-C2, IP2-E4, 3B-11, and 2F-2B were from American Type Culture
Collection (Manassas, VA). The lines were cultured in Iscove’s modified
Dulbecco’s medium (IMDM) plus 10% fetal calf serum, glutamine, and
antibiotics and tested to be pathogen-free (IMPACT test) before the in vivo
experiments. Tumor cells were occasionally cultured for 2 days with 500
IU/mL of recombinant mouse interferon-␥ (IFN-␥) (R&D Systems, Minneapolis, MN) to induce MHC class II expression.
Tumor challenge
5347
B16 ⫽ 1.5 ⫻ 104. [3H]Thymidine was added for the last 18 hours of
culture. Cells were harvested and incorporated thymidine quantified.
CFSE labeling and in vivo killing assay
For in vivo proliferation assays, TCR transgenic cells were labeled with 4
mol/L carboxyfluorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester (CFSE) (Invitrogen). For target cells, male and female B6 spleen cells were labeled with 0.2
and 1mol/L of CFSE respectively, as described.39 After washing,
3 ⫻ 106male and 3 ⫻ 106female cells were infused intravenously in 300 l
total. Between 18 and 24 hours later, we harvested the spleens (SPL), the
tumor draining lymph nodes (TDLN: axillary and inguinal LN draining the
flank where MB49 tumor had been injected), and the same lymph nodes
from the opposite flank (LN), and determined the percentage of CFSEpositive cells by flow cytometry. The percentage of anti-H-Y—specific
killing was determined as: 100 ⫺ 100 ⫻ (% male CFSE cells/% female
CFSE cells).
Down-regulation of class II expression by siRNA
Total RNA was extracted using RNeasy Mini Kit (QIAGEN, Valencia, CA),
and reverse transcribed. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed
using the following primers: Dby: forward, 5⬘-CAATAGCAGCCGAAGTAGTGGTAGT-3⬘; reverse, 5⬘-AACTGCCTGGGAGTTATAATTTCCT3⬘. Uty: forward, 5⬘-GCTCACTTATATGAAACCCAGAGGAA-3⬘; reverse, 5⬘-CATATTATGGTGCATCCAACCTAACT-3⬘. To check for genomic
DNA contamination, we prepared parallel samples without reverse transcriptase (RT).
We evaluated 8 oligonucleotide targeting sequences of siRNA against MHC
class II A␣b in transient transfection experiments (“Supplemental methods”
and Figures S1 and S2), and chose one (GAAGGAGACTGTCTGGATG),
corresponding to nucleotide positions 195 to 213 of A␣b coding sequence)
to build short hairpin RNA (shRNA) lentiviral vectors also carrying the
sequence for enhanced green fluorescent protein (GFP) (Figure S3),
following published protocols.40 Generation of control viruses and viral
titration are described in “Supplemental methods.” Aliquots of the MB49
cell line were then transduced with 5.9 ⫻ 105 plaque-forming units
(multiplicity of infection ⫽ 4) of the empty vector, or the vector containing
short interfering RNA (siRNA) for LacZ, or the siRNA for Ab, thus
generating 3 cell lines (MB49⭋, MB49-LacZ(i), and MB49-Ab(i), respectively). Around 95% of the cells from the 3 cell lines were GFP-positive
even after several weeks of in vitro culture (Figure S4).
Flow cytometry
Depletion of NK cells
After blocking nonspecific binding with ultra-block solution (a mixture of
rat, hamster and mouse sera, with 10 g/mL 2.4G2 monoclonal antibody),
cells were stained with various combinations of the following monoclonal antibodies: phycoerythrin-labeled anti-H-2Db, anti-H-2Ab, or antiNK1.1; fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled anti-CD4 or anti-CD8; biotinconjugated anti-CD45.2, anti-TCRV6, or anti-TCRV8; and
allophycocyanin-labeled Db-Uty tetramer (National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases tetramer facility) which were followed by
streptavidin-allophycocyanin incubation (all from BD Pharmingen, San
Diego, CA). Dead cells were excluded by staining with 7-aminoactinomycin D (7-AAD; BD Pharmingen).
In vitro depletion of NK cells from Marilyn spleen and LN was done with
Miltenyi beads (Miltenyi Biotec Inc, Auburn, CA) coated with rat
anti-mouse DX5 antibodies according to the manufacturer’s instructions. In
vivo depletion of NK cells was achieved by intraperitoneal injections of 100
g of the mouse IgG2a anti-NK1.1 antibody, PK136, with the mouse IgG2a
anti-Ek antibody 14-4-4S as control. Both were purified from hybridoma
supernatants by the NIAID antibody facility. Antibodies were given 3 days
before tumor challenge, again at day 1 (together with transfer of Marilyn
cells) and every 7 days until no tumor-bearing mice remained. Successful
depletion was tested by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis
of spleen, lymph nodes, and tumors, using DX5 and NK1.1 antibodies (data
not shown).
Reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction
Adoptive transfer and in vitro killing assay
One day after tumor challenge, mice received 106 cells (unless otherwise
noted) from freshly isolated spleen and mesenteric lymph nodes of the TCR
transgenic mice, or the same cells previously primed in vitro. In vitro
stimulation with or without 10% Concanavalin A supernatant (BD Biosciences, San Jose, CA) was performed as described.38 In some experiments, the in vitro primed cells were tested for killing activity using either
the JAM test or the P-JAM test.38 In Figure 3d, mice that had received
Marilyn cells were immunized several times (days 2, 5, 7, 9, 13, and 17 after
tumor challenge) with 3 ⫻ 106 male CD3⑀⫺/⫺ splenocytes; injection route
was the footpad contralateral to the tumor.
Proliferation assay
Marilyn spleen cells (105 per 0.2 mL/well) were cultured for 3 days in
complete IMDM plus 2-mercaptoethanol with various numbers of mitomycin C (Sigma, St Louis, MO) treated spleen or tumor stimulators as a source
of antigen. The stimulators were titrated (3-fold dilutions): the highest
numbers per well were: male and female spleen cells ⫽ 5 ⫻ 105 MB49 and
Results
The model system
To compare the antitumor effects of pure populations of CD4 and
CD8 cells against the same tumor antigen, in the absence of other T
cells, we used 2 RAG.KO TCRTg mice (Figure 1A): MataHari.RAG.KO,31 whose CD8 cells are specific for the antigen Uty
complexed with H-2Db; and Marilyn.RAG.KO,32 whose CD4 cells
are specific for Dby complexed with Ab. Both Uty and Dby are part
of the H-Y antigenic complex, expressed by almost all mammalian
male cells, except red blood cells (Matzinger and Wade, unpublished data). Both antigens can be presented directly by target/
stimulator cells, or indirectly by host cells, and both CD8 MataHari
and CD4 Marilyn T cells can reject male skin grafts by direct or by
indirect mechanisms.31,41 For the first model tumor, we chose the
B6-male bladder carcinoma, MB49, which expresses both Uty
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Unless otherwise noted, 105 cells in 100 l of phosphate-buffered saline
were injected subcutaneously into the right flank. Tumor size was measured
every 3 to 4 days, and the volume was calculated as length ⫻ width ⫻
height/2. Mice were killed if they became distressed or if tumor volume
became ⬎ 1000 mm.3 For the TC-tet pancreatic tumor, after 7 days of
tumor challenge, blood glucose levels were measured every day and tumors
were considered established when glucose levels were ⬍ 3 mM. For
humanitarian reasons, mice were usually killed within 2 days after
hypoglycemia detection.
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BLOOD, 15 JUNE 2007 䡠 VOLUME 109, NUMBER 12
(33 and Figure 1B) and Dby (Figure 1B). MB49 also expresses Db,
and like most tumor cells, does not express Class II molecules (in
this case, Ab) under normal in vitro conditions, though they can
up-regulate Ab in vivo (Figure 1C), or when cultured with IFN-␥
(Figure 1C).
To determine whether the TCRTg T cells could recognize the
H-Y antigens expressed by MB49, we ran 18-hour killing assays
against MB49 and against B16 melanoma cells (which also
up-regulate class I and class II molecules after IFN-␥ stimulation
[Figure S5] but don’t express H-Y [data not shown]). As expected,
the CD8 and CD4 T cells behaved typically: activated MataHari
cells killed MB49, whereas Marilyn T cells did not, even after
IFN-␥-induced up-regulation of MHC class II (Figure 1D). Marilyn
cells proliferated in response to male antigen-presenting cells
(APCs) and approximately 5-fold less well to MB49 (presumably
because of the need for antigen cross-presentation on APCs)
(Figure 1E).
CD4 T cells are more effective in vivo than CD8T cells
Vaccines and/or adoptive therapies that show the induction of
strong in vitro CD8 activity often do not result in tumor clearance.
Figure 2A shows that, in the absence of additional treatments, the
same is true for MataHari. Although MataHari cells killed MB49
Figure 2. Marilyn CD4 cells reject MB49 tumor in vivo better than MataHari CD8
cells. (A) Survival of RAG.KO mice (dashed line), MataHari mice (circles) or Marilyn
mice (triangles) after challenge with MB49 tumor cells. (B) Survival of RAG.KO mice
that were infused one day after tumor challenge with 106 MataHari cells (circles) or
105 Marilyn cells (triangles) or no cells (dashed line).
cells very efficiently in vitro (Figure 1D),the MataHari Tg mice did
not clear the tumor in vivo (Figure 2A). To our surprise, however,
80% of the Tg Marilyn mice completely rejected MB49 tumor
challenge (Figure 2A). We found similar results when we transferred splenocytes from the TCR transgenic mice into RAG.KO
mice previously challenged with MB49 tumor (Figure 2B). CD4
cells unable to kill tumor cells in vitro nevertheless caused tumor
rejection under in vivo conditions where CD8 cells were ineffective.
Analysis of the CD8 T cells’ lack of in vivo antitumor effect
The poor antitumor effect of MataHari splenocytes was somewhat
surprising, as they are extremely potent CTLs (Figure 1D), make
IFN-␥ in vitro,31 and rapidly reject male skin grafts in vivo, both by
direct and indirect means.31 One possibility arose from recent
studies in which CD8 T cells were refractive to secondary
stimulation if they had been primed in the absence of help.42 To test
whether the lack of tumor rejection was due to an absence of help
during the activation phase,43 we stimulated MataHari cells in vitro
in the presence of supernatants from activated CD4 T cells (CAS).
Although “helped” MataHari cells were approximately 10-fold
more effective in vitro (Figure 3A), they remained completely
ineffective against MB49 in vivo (Figure 3B). We also provided
help to MataHari cells by transferring them together with Marilyn
CD4 cells into tumor-bearing mice; however, the combination of
MataHari and Marilyn cells was not better than Marilyn alone (data
not shown). A second possibility arose from the evidence that
tumors can be immunosuppressive.44 To determine whether MB49
suppressed the killing activity of pre-activated MataHari cells,we
tested the in vivo killing activity of primed MataHari cells residing
in tumor-free or tumor-bearing RAG.KO mice, 20 days after
adoptive transfer. We injected, as targets, male and female spleen
cells labeled with CFSE, and enumerated the remaining targets 24
hours later. We found that MataHari cells killed equivalently in
tumor-bearing and tumor-free mice, in both spleen and tumordraining lymph nodes (Figure 3C). Thus, MataHari’s ineffectiveness against the tumor was not because they were incapable of
killing as they exhibited excellent in vivo CTL function that was
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Figure 1. In vitro characterization of the MataHari
and Marilyn T cells and the MB49 tumor. (A) TCR,
CD8, and CD4 expression of MataHari (V8) and Marilyn
(V6) T cells. Numbers represent the percentage of transgenic cells in the mixed population of spleen and mesenteric lymph node cells used in the adoptive transfer experiments. (B) H-Y expression of the MB49 tumor. PCR using
specific primers for the sequences of Dby and Uty that
code for the peptide epitopes seen by Marilyn and MataHari, respectively. Spleens from female and male B6
mice were used as negative and positive controls. (C)
Expression of MHC Class I (Db) and MHC Class II (Ab) by in
vitro-grown MB49 tumor cells that were either untreated
(⫺) or incubated for 2 days with 500 IU/mL of IFN-␥ (⫹IFN-␥)
or by tumor cells growing subcutaneously in a female B6
mouse, 7 days after inoculation (ex vivo). Unshaded area is
staining seen with a control antibody (specific for Kd.) (D) In
vitro antitumor activity. Eighteen-hour JAM test to measure
killing activity of MataHari cells (left panel) or Marilyn cells
(right panel) against MB49 (circles) or B16 (squares) tumor
targets that had been incubated with IFN-␥ as in C (filled
symbols) or not (open symbols). R/T ⫽ responder to target
ratio. (E) Proliferation of Marilyn CD4 cells in vitro. Proliferation of Marilyn cells either alone (asterisk) or in presence of
mitomycin treated MB49 (circles), B16 (squares), male
spleen (diamonds), or female spleen (triangles) as described
in “Materials and methods.” The highest number of stimulators were 1.5 ⫻ 104 for the tumor cells and 5 ⫻ 105 for the
splenocytes. D and E show one experiment that is representative of 3.
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EFFECTOR ANTITUMOR CD4 CELLS
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clearly not inhibited by the presence of a growing tumor expressing
the target Uty/Db complex.
Because the in vivo assay measures the killing activity of
MataHari cells found in secondary lymphoid organs, we considered
the possibility that effector MataHari cells might remain there and
not traffic to the tumor itself. We therefore checked for MataHari
cells in the growing tumors. They universally ranged from 1% to
10% of all the cells at the tumor site (Figure 3D), including in
tumors from mice in which we had documented in vivo killing
activity (Figure 3C). Thus MataHari’s lack of antitumor activity
was not due to an inability to traffic to the tumor. In vitro, at a ratio
of one effector to 10 targets, MataHari can clear 20% of the
surrounding target cells in as little as 4 hours (Figure 3A) and, in
vivo, the MataHari cells easily clear male targets (Figure 3C), yet
they were unable to clear the tumor.
CTL-mediated antitumor attack can select for loss variants that
lack MHC class I molecules.45 To test the possibility that the tumor
cells might have lost expression of Db, making them invisible to
MataHari cells, we analyzed MHC expression of the same tumors
that had been analyzed for MataHari trafficking, and found that all
tumors from moribund mice showed high levels of Db expression
(Figure 3E). The tumors had not lost the H-Y antigen or susceptibility to lysis, because they were killed in vitro by activated MataHari
cells (Figure 3F). Thus, tumor growth in the treated mice is not
explained by the outgrowth of escape variants.
We do not presently know why MataHari cells, which are
extremely effective at rejecting male skin and at killing male targets
in vitro and in vivo, cannot clear the H-Y–bearing tumor. This
defect is not limited to MataHari Tg-mice. In most other models,
TCRTg CD8 T cells clear tumors only when the T cells and/or the
recipients are manipulated in extraordinary ways (eg, genetically
manipulated to remove inhibitory surface molecules9) or when the
host is irradiated and/or treated with nearly toxic levels of
interleukin-210,11 or with anti-CTLA-4 antibody,46 and so forth. In
our hands, many normal female B6 mice were equally unable to
reject MB49, even though their anti-H-Y CD8 cells increased in
number, as measured by staining with Uty/Db tetramers (Figure
3G). A similar disconnect between surrogate tests of effector
function versus actual tumor clearance has been seen in other
studies in humans 1,5 and mice,7,10,47 where CD8 T cells that were
effective in in vitro tests were nevertheless poor at clearing
growing tumors in vivo. This is thus a widely known phenomenon
that has led to the suggestion that some tumors may outpace the
CD8 killers6,47,48 or that the tumor environment impairs T cell
effector function.49
How then were the CD4 Marilyn cells able to reject MB49?
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Figure 3. Both helpless and helped MataHari CD8 cells are effective killers but cannot reject the MB49 tumor. (A) Concanavalin A supernatant (CAS), as a source of
helper factors, improves killing activity of MataHari. MataHari cells were cultured without (open circles) or with (filled circles) CAS and then tested in vitro (one representative
experiment out of 3) against MB49 or B16 tumor targets (solid or dashed lines, respectively) in a 4-hour P-JAM Test (“Materials and methods”). (B) In vivo activity of “helped”
MataHari cells. MataHari cells were stimulated in vitro in the presence of CAS and then adoptively transferred into RAG.KO recipients that had been challenged with MB49
tumor cells one day previously. Data are from 2 pooled experiments, of which one is the same experiment as shown in A. (C) Presence of the MB49 tumor does not inhibit the in
vivo killing activity of MataHari. In vivo killing activity was measured, at day 20 or 28, in tumor-bearing RAG.KO recipient mice (closed symbols) and in non—tumor-bearing
controls (open symbols) that had been infused with either CAS-MataHari cells or naive Marilyn cells at day 1 after tumor challenge. To assess the male-specific killing activity,
equal numbers of CFSE-labeled male and female target splenocytes were given, and the remaining target cells in SPL (squares), inguinal and axillary TDLN (triangles) and
non—tumor-draining contralateral LN (circles) analyzed 18 to 24 hours later. Data are pooled from 2 independent experiments. (D and E) Analysis of MHC expression and
MataHari trafficking in the tumor. MB49 tumors were collected 20 days after challenge, from untreated or CAS-MataHari treated RAG.KO (as in A) and analyzed by FACS,
gating on 7-AAD⫺ cells. (D) Presence of MataHari. Number represents the percentage of CD8 cells, found at the tumor site in one representative mouse. (E) Class I (Db)
staining of tumor cells (gating on CD45.2⫺ cells). Data in D and E are each from 2 mice representative of 10 analyzed. (F) Tumors growing in the presence of MataHari cells are
not escape variants. Large tumors growing in RAG.KO mice (420 mm3), or in RAG.KO into which MataHari CD8 cells had been transferred (500 mm3), were excised when
required by Animal Care and Use Committee protocols (19 days after adoptive transfer of the CD8 cells). Tumors were labeled with [3H]thymidine overnight and used as targets
for previously in vitro activated MataHari cells in a 24-hour JAM Test. (G) Presence of anti-H-Y CD8 cells in normal B6 mice. Db/Uty tetramer staining in blood of a naive female
B6 mouse (left panel) and of a moribund tumor-bearing female B6 mouse (right panel). Numbers represent the percentage of CD8 cells that bind to the tetramers. Two mice
representative of 16.
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Marilyn does not need to directly bind the tumor
Figures 1D and 3C show that Marilyn cells exhibited a small
amount of killing activity against male targets, suggesting that
Marilyn might recognize Dby/Ab complexes on the tumor surface.
In vivo, such recognition could lead to several outcomes. On the
one hand, class II/H-Y complexes on tumor cells could act as direct
targets for killing by CD4 effectors. On the other hand, class II
expression by tumor cells might induce tolerance in tumor-specific
CD4 T cells.50,51 To test these possibilities, we used 2 approaches.
First, we created a stable transfectant of MB49, using shRNA for
the ␣ chain of Ab, to reduce the amount of MHC complexes on the
tumor-cell surface (designated MB49-Ab(i); see “Materials and
methods”). As controls, we generated stable transfectants carrying
shRNA for LacZ (MB49-LacZ(i)) or the empty vector (MB49⭋).
Although the level of MHC class II Ab molecules was significantly
reduced on the MB49-Ab(i) transfectants (Figure 4A), this downregulation had neither a positive nor a negative effect on Marilyn’s
ability to clear the tumor (Figures 4B and S6).
The possibility that the residual amount of Ab expressed by
MB49-Ab(i) was enough to present Dby to Marilyn led us to a
second approach: testing Marilyn CD4 cells against a male tumor
expressing the “wrong” MHC restriction element. The TC-tet
pancreatic tumor, from male C3H mice,34 expresses both Uty and
Dby (Figure S7) but expresses H-2k, rather than H-2b, and thus
cannot be recognized directly by MataHari or Marilyn T cells.41
Figure 4C shows that the CD4 Marilyn cells, but not the MataHari
cells, were able to clear the H-2k male tumor even though they
could not directly recognize it, demonstrating that MHC class II
expression on the tumor was not necessary for tumor clearance.
To test this, we labeled naive MataHari and Marilyn cells with
CFSE (which is diluted 2-fold with each cell division), transferred
them into H-2b recipients of an H-Y expressing H-2k tumor (tumor
3B-11; see Figures 7C and S7), where cross presentation by host
cells would be the only source of stimulatory antigen, and
measured the proliferative responses in the TDLNs 4 days later.
Figure 5A,B show that both cells responded well; MataHari
reached 79% fully divided cells (a 9-fold increase over the 9%
space-induced expansion in tumor-free hosts) and Marilyn cells
increased 8-fold, from 4% to 33%. Thus it seems that the efficiency
of stimulatory antigen cross-presentation by host APCs was quite
effective for both antigens, allowing for good priming of both cell
types. Marilyn’s superiority to MataHari is therefore not due to a
lack of cross priming of the CD8 CTL.
To test whether there might also be a role for host-cell–mediated
cross-presentation to Marilyn in the effector phase, we transferred
Marilyn T cells into tumor-bearing H-2k mice, which cannot
present Dby to Marilyn, and into tumor-bearing H-2b mice as
controls. To prevent rejection of the Marilyn cells by host NK cells
Host cross presentation at the priming and effector phases
Marilyn’s ability to clear the Ak tumor in an Ab host suggested that
the tumor antigens were being cross-presented, and this indicated a
potential explanation for the superiority of Marilyn compared with
MataHari T cells. Cross presentation, which has previously been
shown to be necessary for the priming of naı̈ve antitumor CD8
CTL,52 is generally less efficient for MHC class I/Ag complexes
than for class II. Perhaps, therefore, the Uty antigen was less
effectively cross-presented to MataHari than the Dby to Marilyn.
Figure 5. H-Y antigen is cross-presented in vivo to both MataHari and Marilyn T
cells. CFSE dilution of MataHari (A) or Marilyn (B) T cells 4 days after transfer into
either H-2bRAG.KO tumor free (top panels) or H-2k-tumor bearing (bottom panels)
mice. Histograms are gated on TCR␣ and CD8 or CD4, for MataHari or Marilyn,
respectively. Cells are from the inguinal and axillary lymph nodes (the tumor-draining
lymph nodes in the tumor-bearing mice). Numbers represent the percentage of TCR
transgenic cells that divided more than 6 times.
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Figure 4. Role of MHC Class II on tumor cells. (A) shRNA-mediated down-regulation of MHC class II expression by MB49. Three RAG.KO mice per group were challenged
(day 0) with each of the tumor cell lines, MB49mock, MB49-LacZ(i), and MB49-Ab(i). On day 5, they received 8 ⫻ 105 Marilyn cells to induce the up-regulation of class II
molecules and on day 13 the tumors were taken for analysis (gating on the CD45.2⫺ and 7-AAD⫺ population to exclude immigrating immune cells and dead cells). Histograms
represent class II (Ab) staining of the tumor cells from one mouse from each group. Empty line is the isotype control. Bar graph represents the averages of the mean
fluorescence of the 3 mice per group (gray area) compared with that of the isotype controls (white). (B) Marilyn cells reject tumors with knocked-down Ab: RAG.KO mice were
challenged with either 105 MB49 mock cells (no symbol), or MB49-⭋ (circles), MB49-LacZ(i) (squares), or MB49-Ab(i) (diamonds) cells. One day later, half of the mice in each
group received 106 Marilyn cells (closed symbols). The average tumor size (10-20 mice total per group), from 3 individual experiments is shown. (C) Marilyn mice reject tumors
that do not express Ab. Percentage of tumor free RAG.KO (broken line), MataHari (circles), or Marilyn (triangles) mice after challenge with 5 ⫻ 106 TC-tet (H-2k) pancreatic
tumor cells. Data were pooled from 2 experiments.
BLOOD, 15 JUNE 2007 䡠 VOLUME 109, NUMBER 12
EFFECTOR ANTITUMOR CD4 CELLS
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Generalizing the results to other CD4 T cells and other tumors
Figure 6. Role of host MHC class II, and of host NK cells, in CD4-mediated tumor
rejection. (A) Role of host MHC class II. RAG.KO (H-2b) mice (squares) and
CD3KO/␥cKO H-2b (circles) or H-2k (triangles) mice were challenged with MB49
cells. Approximately half of the mice per group were either untreated (left panel) or
received 106 Marilyn cells 1 day later (right panel). To overcome the need for class II
(Ab) for initiating and maintaining CD4 T-cell activation, mice receiving Marilyn cells
were immunized with male splenocytes at days 2, 5, 7, 9, 13, and 17 after tumor
challenge. The average tumor size (6-12 mice per group) from a total of 3 individual
experiments is shown. (B) Role of NK cells. Percentage of RAG.KO/␥cKO recipient
mice (left panel) or RAG.KO mice (right panel) alive after receiving MB49 challenge
and left untreated (broken line) or treated with 106 Marilyn cells (triangles). Some of
the RAG.KO mice received Marilyn cells that had been depleted of NK cells (to
deplete donor NK cells only [closed diamonds]), Marilyn cells plus either anti-NK
monoclonal antibodies (to deplete both host and donor NK cells [closed circles]), or
control antibodies (open circles) as described in “Materials and methods.” Data
pooled from 3 independent experiments. (C) NK cells are present in the tumor. MB49
tumors were collected from Marilyn-treated RAG.KO mice 49 days after challenge
and analyzed for the presence of various cell populations by FACS, gating on living
7-AAD⫺ cells. Numbers represent the percentage of CD4 or NK cells within the
CD45⫺ population found at the tumor site. For comparison, tumors growing in
untreated RAG.KO mice were stained for NK in the same way cells, 28 days after
tumor challenge. Data are representative of 1 of 2 mice.
in the H-2k mice, we used C3H (H-2k) or B6 (H-2b) CD3/␥c doubleknockout recipients. To supply appropriate APCs for priming of the
transferred CD4 Marilyn T cells, we immunized the mice repeatedly
with male B6 APCs. Figure 6A shows that Marilyn cells were effective
in Ab, but not in Ak recipients, even though they had clearly been
activated by the multiple immunizations with Ab APCs (Figure S8).
These results show that antigen presentation by host cells is required at
the effector phase for tumor rejection by primed CD4 Marilyn cells,
perhaps via the activation of local macrophages and/or other cells.17,22
To determine whether Marilyn’s antitumor effect could be generalized to other CD4 cells, we tested Rachel, a different TCR-Tg
mouse that has slightly higher avidity for Dby/Ab.32 Although not
as effective as Marilyn, Rachel cells were nevertheless more
effective than MataHari (Figure 2B and 3B), delaying tumor
growth for several weeks (Figure 7A).
To determine whether Marilyn’s antitumor effect could be
generalized to tumors from different tissues, we tested 4 more
tumors that were constitutively positive for Dby and Uty (Figure
S7). Two expressed Ab (WR21, a salivary gland carcinoma, and
TRAMP-C2, a prostate carcinoma), and 2 (the IP2-E4 and 3B-11
endotheliomas) expressed the “wrong” haplotype, H-2k. The H-Y
loss variant 2F-2B, cloned from the same original tumor as IP2-E4
and 3B-11, served as an H-Y–negative control (Figure S7). Figure
7B,C show that (1) although MataHari mice showed some activity
against the H-2b tumors, WR21 and TRAMP-C2, Marilyn mice
were always better; (2) both Marilyn T cells (Figure 7C) and
Rachel T cells (Figure S9) were more effective than MataHari
against H-2k tumors they could not directly bind to (MataHari, in
fact, had no effect at all on these tumors); and 3) Marilyn cells did
not reject the H-Y–negative 2F-2B, showing that the CD4 cells do
not act nonspecifically but that their effect is tumor-antigendependent, although the antigen-specific contact need not be on the
tumor itself and may be mediated partially via non–antigen-specific
NK cells.
NK cells play a role in the effector phase
Discussion
We were surprised to find that MB49 tumors were completely
inhibited in single H-2b RAG.KO recipients of Marilyn cells
Because of their capacity to kill in vitro, the universality of MHC
class I expression, and the availability of reagents to identify them,
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(Figure 6A, right panel), but grew slowly in H-2b-CD3/␥c doubleknockout recipients, suggesting that B cells (in CD3/␥c KO mice)
might inhibit the antitumor efficacy of the CD4 T cells, or that
␥c-binding cytokines might have a positive role in CD4 T-cell
mediated tumor rejection. To distinguish between these, we compared Marilyn’s antitumor efficacy in ␥c-positive and -negative
mice lacking T and B cells (RAG.KO and Rag/␥c double-knockout
mice). The absence of B cells did not restore Marilyn’s efficacy in
␥c-deficient recipients. The Marilyn cells (‚) were able to slow the
growth of the MB49 tumor in the Rag/␥c-deficient mice, but the
tumor eventually killed the mice (Figure 6B, left panel).
Because mice lacking the common cytokine receptor ␥ chain
are markedly deficient in NK cells, we sought to determine whether
Marilyn might be partnering with NK cells to clear the tumor. For
this, we transferred Marilyn cells into RAG.KO recipients and
depleted the NK cells from the donor Marilyn inoculum or from
both the donor inoculum and the host. Figure 6B (right panel)
shows that NK-depleted recipients behaved exactly like ␥cdeficient recipients. In the absence of NK cells, the transferred
Marilyn cells were able to delay tumor growth, but it grew out at
later time points. These data suggest that the early phase of the CD4
T cell antitumor response may be NK-cell independent, whereas
long-term tumor clearance requires host NK cells. To determine
whether the NK cells migrated to the tumor site or might be acting
only in the draining node (perhaps by supplying IFN-␥ to maintain
a Th1 response 53), we stained the tumor for the presence of
Marilyn CD4 cells and for NK cells. Figure 6C shows that both
types of cells were present in the tumor mass, suggesting that they
might be working in concert at the tumor site.
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PEREZ-DIEZ et al
BLOOD, 15 JUNE 2007 䡠 VOLUME 109, NUMBER 12
CD8 cells have been the main focus of several decades of research
in antitumor immunotherapy. Our data suggest that, at least in some
cases, CD4 T cells might actually do a better job than CD8 T cells.
The data showed that
1) Tumor specific CD4 T cells were able to eliminate a wide
variety of tumors that were resistant to CD8-mediated rejection.
2) CD4 cells partnered with NK cells for complete tumor clearance.
3) Lack of MHC expression by the tumor did not lessen the
antitumor effect of the CD4 effector cells.
4) Neither the antitumoral effect of the CD4-T cells nor the
ineffectiveness of the CD8-T cells was predictable from their in
vitro or in vivo killing activity.
Let us take these areas in turn. First, although the last 25 years
have seen occasional reports in which CD4 cells cleared tumors
without the aid of CD8 cells,13-17 the relative efficacy of the 2 types
of effectors has never before been evaluated, and the prevailing
view is that the immune system’s preeminent antitumor weapons
are the CD8 T cells. The majority of antitumor therapies therefore
continue to focus on CD8 killers, occasionally including CD4 cells
as potential helpers. However, most CD8-oriented treatments give
poor results in human trials (reviewed in 5). The finding that CD4 T
cells can clear several different kinds of tumors that are resistant to
CD8 cells suggests that CD4-based treatments might be worth
studying. There is some support for this from clinical trials2,3 in
which transfers of mixed populations containing both CD4 and
CD8 cells were more effective than CD8 populations that contained
no CD4s. Although the authors suggested that CD4 cells could
have contributed to the in vivo persistence or activity of CD8 cells,
an alternative is that the CD4 cells might themselves have had a
strong antitumor effect.
Second, we found that tumor clearance by Marilyn CD4 T cells
required host expression of appropriate MHC class II molecules,
even when the CD4 cells were repeatedly immunized with
appropriate APCs. We surmise that the T cells need to see local
antigen/MHC complexes at the tumor site, either on classic APCs
or on endothelial cells, which have been described to up-regulate
class II molecules under inflammatory conditions.54 Two different,
nonexclusive scenarios could then apply. In one, local antigen
presentation activates the CD4 T cells to release cytokines that are
toxic for the tumor and/or the supporting stroma.16 In other words,
the CD4 T cell is the essential effector, even though its recognition
of the tumor is indirect. In the second scenario, the CD4/APC
interaction results in local activation of APC and/or other surrounding cells (such as host macrophages, NK cells, etc17,22) that in turn
target the tumor or the local stromal cells. Indeed, we found that
complete tumor clearance required the presence of host cells
bearing NK markers, although early inhibition of tumor growth did
not (Figure 6B). The essential NK1.1⫹ partners were not NK T
cells, given that the Marilyn CD4 T cells cleared tumors in
RAG.KO recipients, or NK-dendritic cells (DCs),55,56 because the
CD4 T cells did not efficiently clear tumors in RAG/␥c doubleknockout mice (which have plenty of NK-dendritic cells56). The
NK1.1⫹ partners were therefore most likely NK cells. Because NK
cells and DCs can activate each other,57,58 we can picture a
communication triangle in which tumor-specific CD4 cells activate
NK cells via a DC bridge and/or NK cells help to sustain the CD4
response through the activation of DCs. A variation of this scenario
comes from a previous report suggesting that CD4 T cells might
also partner with tumor-infiltrating macrophages.17,22 At first glance,
such a duo might seem less likely than that of the CD4/NK cell
partnership, given that tumor-infiltrating macrophages have been
shown to support tumor growth by promoting angiogenesis and
tissue remodeling and repair.59,60 However, CD4 cells are effective
educators of other cells: they can license DCs to activate CD8
killers,43 they can educate DCs to perpetuate oral tolerance,61 and
they can induce B cells to switch to a different class of antibody. It
is only a small step to suppose that tumor-specific CD4 cells could
recognize tumor-infiltrating macrophages, via cross-presented tumor antigens, and alter their phenotype from “tumor-nurturing” to
“tumor-rejecting.” Overall, it seems that CD4 T cells may partner
with many different types of host cells to clear the tumor,
something that CD8 cells may be less able to do.
Whether the CD4 T cells act alone (via T-cell–derived cytokines), or with NK and/or macrophage partners, it is not yet clear
whether they target the tumor itself or the supporting stroma. There
have been some rare examples where CD8 cells inhibited tumors
by killing the stroma. In some cases, the CD8 cells were specific for
unique stromal antigens,62,63 whereas in others they targeted tumor
antigens cross-presented by the stromal cells.16,64 CD4 T cells
might be expected to more efficiently recognize stromal cells
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Figure 7. CD4 antitumor effect is generalizable. (A) Rachel, another anti-H-Y CD4
TCR Tg mouse, also rejects MB49. Percentage of RAG.KO mice alive after being challenged with MB49 tumor cells and receiving,
1 day later, either nothing (broken lines), 106
Marilyn cells (triangles), or 106 Rachel cells
(an anti-H-Y CD4 transgenic mouse with a
different TCR from that of Marilyn). Data
from 3 pooled experiments. (B and C) Marilyn’s superiority to MataHari is seen with
other tumors: percentage of RAG.KO (broken line), MataHari (circles), or Marilyn (triangles) mice that survived challenge with
either (B) H-2b carcinomas: 3 ⫻ 105 of WR21
(left panel, a salivary gland carcinoma),
3 ⫻ 106 of TRAMP-C2 (right panel, prostate
carcinoma), or (C) H-2k endotheliomas:
IP2-E4 (left panel), 3B-11 (middle panel), or
H-Y–negative 2F-2B (right panel), 2 ⫻ 105
of each.
BLOOD, 15 JUNE 2007 䡠 VOLUME 109, NUMBER 12
EFFECTOR ANTITUMOR CD4 CELLS
Acknowledgments
We thank the NIAID tetramer facility for providing the Uty-Db
tetramer, Fraia Melchionda for providing the MB49 cell line,
Shimon Efrat for providing the TC-tet cell line, and Ronald
Germain and Luk Van Parijs for providing valuable reagents for the
shRNA experiment. We also thank Ronald Schwartz, Jay Berzofsky, Francesco Marincola, Suzanne Topalian, and Nicholas Restifo
for critically reading (and improving) the manuscript.
This work was supported by the Intramural Research Program
of the National Institutes of Health, National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases. C.C.A. was funded by Canadian Institutes of
Health Research and Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical
Research grants.
Authorship
Contribution: A.P.D. and P.M. conceived and designed the experiments, analyzed the data, and wrote the paper. A.P.D. performed the
experiments not mentioned below. N.T.J. and O.L. designed and
performed, and analyzed the data from the experiments shown in
Figure 6A and S8. K.C. designed and made the lentivirus constructs
and helped in experiments shown in Figures S1, S2, and S4.
W.F.N.C. and C.C.A. designed and performed, and analyzed the
data from the experiment shown in Figure 4C.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Correspondence: Ainhoa Perez-Diez, Ghost Lab, Laboratory of
Cellular and Molecular Immunology, National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda,
MD 20892; e-mail:
[email protected]
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