Genetic Infection Induces ProtectiveIn VivoImmune Responses
- 1 October 1993
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in DNA and Cell Biology
- Vol. 12 (8) , 675-683
- https://doi.org/10.1089/dna.1993.12.675
Abstract
Drug-induced abortive retroviral infection has been reported to induce both T-cell and B-cell immunity in vivo. We sought to analyze if replication-incompetent retroviruses could induce the development of similarly protective in vivo immune responses in a more desirable fashion. To evaluate retroviral transduction vaccination (genetic infection), a plasmid encoding human CD4 in a retroviral vector was transfected into the pA317 amphotropic retroviral packaging system. The resulting replication defective retrovirus was used to transduce BALB/c mice prior to tumor challenge with human CD4. Immunization elicited specific humoral and cellular anti-human CD4 responses. We evaluated anti-cell responses using a tumor model system. We observed that BALB/c mice challenged with SP2/0 lymphoma cells develop lethal tumors and die within 7 weeks of challenge. Cloned SP2/0 cells stably transfected with the human cell-surface antigen CD4 also develop tumors in naive mice and succumb to the tumors in a similar manner to SP2/0 inoculated animals. In contrast, CD4 retrovirus-transduced animals, when challenged with the CD4-expressing SP2/0 cells, demonstrated a low incidence of tumors and significantly enhanced survival compared to the mice immunized similarly with human CD8 retrovirus. These results establish an in vivo tumor challenge system with relevance to the development of protective in vivo immune responses, and indicate that genetic infection is a useful technique for inducing protective immunity.Keywords
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