Combination of CD80 and Granulocyte-Macrophage Colony-Stimulating Factor Coexpression by a Leukemia Cell Vaccine: Preclinical Studies in a Murine Model Recapitulating Philadelphia Chromosome-Positive Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia

Abstract
Philadelphia chromosome-positive acute lymphoblastic leukemia (Ph+ ALL) is a highly aggressive malignancy caused by the bcr-abl translocation oncogene. To explore alternative treatments for Ph+ ALL we tested gene-modified cell vaccines in the BALB/c-derived BM185 leukemia model. We compared the efficacy of BM185 cell vaccine expressing CD80 alone or in combination with IL-2 or GM-CSF. Mice injected with viable BM185 leukemia cells modified to express CD80 and GM-CSF (BM185/CD80+GM-CSF) showed the highest leukemia rejection rates. Cell vaccines consisting of irradiated BM185/CD80+GM-CSF cells administered subcutaneously stimulated a potent cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response against parental BM185. Histological examination of the vaccination site showed a large concentration of immune cells. Administration of the BM185/CD80+GM-CSF cell vaccine before intravenous challenge with parental cells caused strong inhibition of leukemia development. Vaccination after subcutaneous challenge with BM185 cells caused efficient elimination of leukemia promoting 40-60% long-term survival rates. The immunization efficacy of the BM185/CD80+GM-CSF cell vaccine was directly correlated with the percentage of cells expressing the transgenes. In all, this preclinical study shows that leukemia cell vaccines coexpressing CD80 and GM-CSF can potentially be explored for immunotherapy in Ph+ ALL patients.

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