Fc receptors are required in passive and active immunity to melanoma

Abstract
Effective tumor immunity requires recognition of tumor cells coupled with the activation of host effector responses. Fc receptor (FcR) γ−/−mice, which lack the activating FcγR types I and III, did not demonstrate protective tumor immunity in models of passive and active immunization against a relevant tumor differentiation antigen, the brown locus protein gp75. In wild-type mice, passive immunization with mAb against gp75 or active immunization against gp75 prevented the development of lung metastases. This protective response was completely abolished in FcRγ-deficient mice. Immune responses were intact in γ−/−mice because IgG titers against gp75 develop normally in γ−/−mice immunized with gp75. However, uncoupling of the FcγR effector pathway from antibody recognition of tumor antigens resulted in a loss of protection against tumor challenge. These data demonstrate an unexpected and critical role for FcRs in mediating tumor cytotoxicityin vivoand suggest that enhancement of FcγR-mediated antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity by inflammatory cells is a key step in the development of effective tumor immunotherapeutics.