Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P14784 (IL-2 receptor)
3,849 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recent data from studies of experimental murine tumors and certain human tumors (primarily melanoma) suggest that tumor-infiltrating T-lymphocytes (T-cell TILs) represent a highly potent and specific host antitumor response. We conducted an immunohistochemical analysis of the T-cell TIL subpopulations in frozen tissue sections taken from 82 consecutive B-cell diffuse large cell lymphoma (DLCL) patients. Initially, we analyzed the relationship in these patients between relapse-free survival (RFS) and their T-cell TIL characteristics. Nineteen patients had a low percentage (less than 6% of Leu-2+ (suppressor/cytotoxic) T-cell TILs, and 63 patients had a high percentage (greater than 6%) of Leu-2+ TILs. We found that a low percentage of Leu-2+ TILs correlated with a reduction in RFS: at 20 mo follow-up, all 19 low Leu-2+ patients had relapsed, whereas 70% of the 63 high Leu-2+ patients remained relapse-free (P = 0.008). No significant correlations appeared between patients' T-cell TIL subsets and overall survival. The percentage of newly diagnosed tumors with low counts of Leu-4+ (pan-T) TILs was marginally greater among interleukin-2 (IL-2) receptor-positive tumors than among IL-2 receptor-negative tumors (50 versus 28%, P = 0.098), which suggests that specific phenotypic characteristics of B-cell DLCL may modulate the host T-cell TIL response. Our results indicate that the host's T-cell TIL response in B-cell DLCL can be quantitated from frozen tissue sections and that this response may be related to disease course. Further related TIL studies may lead to new immunorestorative therapeutic approaches for patients with deficient or aberrant cytotoxic T-lymphocyte host responses.
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PMID:Tumor-infiltrating T-lymphocytes in B-cell diffuse large cell lymphoma related to disease course. 219 16

Human autologous peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) and lymphocytes infiltrating renal cell carcinoma (TIL) were cultured with medium containing 1000 IU/ml of human interleukin 2 (IL-2). A high cytotoxic activity against fresh autologous as well as cultured allogenic tumor cells was developed. By culturing these lymphocytes with OKT3 monoclonal antibody during the initial 2 days of long-term culture, in terms of T cell activation signal, IL-2-driven lymphocyte proliferation was remarkably accelerated with maintenance of appreciable level of cytotoxic activity. The same culture method also induced an increase in OKT3 and IL-2 receptor positive lymphocyte population in LAK cells and TIL. This method may enable us to gain more autologous TIL in vitro for adoptive immunotherapy of renal cell carcinoma than the usual culture method with IL-2 alone. Five patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma were treated with adoptive immunotherapy with TIL, LAK and IL-2. One patient with pulmonary metastasis has had a minor response which has lasted for 3 months so far. We have not experienced any serious side effects during the treatment.
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PMID:[Study on adoptive immunotherapy with tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) for renal cell carcinoma--amplification of IL-2-elicited TIL proliferation by OKT3-monoclonal antibody]. 230 7

Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL's) were isolated from human glioma biopsy specimens by immunomagnetic separation using T cell-specific monoclonal antibodies coupled to paramagnetic beads, and were expanded in culture with feeder cells and interleukin-2 (IL-2). The infiltrating cells from five of seven patients proliferated in culture. When tested after 2 to 3 weeks of culture, virtually all of the cells stained with antibodies against the CD2 and CD3 antigens. Most cells also expressed human leukocyte antigen class II molecules, while varying percentages of cells stained with antibodies against the IL-2 receptor and the CD4 and CD8 antigens. The cytotoxicity of the cultured TIL's against autologous and allogeneic glioma cells and the K562 and Daudi cell lines was measured and compared with that of lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells from the same patients. None of the TIL's showed significant cytotoxicity against these targets, whereas LAK cells lysed all of the targets.
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PMID:Immunomagnetic separation of infiltrating T lymphocytes from brain tumors. 266 96

TIL from metastatic melanoma proliferated by greater than 1,000-fold (840-3,675, mean 1,543) after 6 wk in culture of mixtures of TIL and tumor cells with rIL-2 alone. Cytolysis was restricted to autologous tumor cells. CD8+ T cells were the predominant population of TIL before and after expansion, and were primarily responsible for autologous tumor-specific CTL activity. No other rIL-2-activated lymphocytes from peripheral blood, lymph nodes with melanoma metastasis, or TIL from sarcoma or renal cell carcinoma had autologous tumor-specific CTL activity. There were few or no CD16+ NK cells in TIL from metastatic melanoma before or after incubation with rIL-2, respectively. However, TIL from sarcoma or renal cell carcinoma contained a substantial proportion of CD3-CD16+ NK cells, which increased in number in culture with rIL-2. Purified CD16+ NK cells as well as CD3+CD16- T cells from rIL-2-activated TIL of renal cell carcinoma displayed MHC-nonrestricted cytotoxicity. At the clonal level as determined by limiting dilution, 8 of 10 clones from melanoma TIL displayed cytotoxicity restricted to autologous tumor cells, while all 13 clones from renal cancer TIL equally lysed autologous and allogeneic tumor cells. Anti-T cell receptor (TCR)-alpha/beta(WT31) mAb as well as anti-CD3 mAb inhibited autologous melanoma cell-specific CTL activity mediated by rIL-2-activated TIL at the effector phase. These two mAbs also inhibited rIL-2-dependent proliferation of these TIL when added to the culture. Pretreatment of fresh melanoma cells with mAb to MHC antigens followed by washing inhibited specific CTL activity. These results suggest that both TCR-alpha/beta on effector TIL and MHC antigens on fresh tumor cells are involved in the specific immune-recognition. After reaching maximum propagation, TIL from metastatic melanoma responded poorly to rIL-2 alone. However, stimulation with fresh autologous melanoma cells restored both CTL activity and proliferation in response to rIL-2. The latter is associated with IL-2 receptor (Tac antigen) expression on the surface. These results indicate that TIL from metastatic melanomas may have unique characteristics different from lymphocytes obtained from the other sources, and may contain precursor CTL sensitized in vivo to autologous tumor cells, and thus can be propagated in larger numbers with rIL-2 alone while retaining autologous tumor-specific CTL activity.
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PMID:Autologous tumor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes in the infiltrate of human metastatic melanomas. Activation by interleukin 2 and autologous tumor cells, and involvement of the T cell receptor. 326 10

While treating stage III melanoma patients with autologous therapeutic TIL in an adjuvant setting, we previously reported a significant benefit of treatment on both progression-free survival and overall survival in patients with only one invaded lymph node (early stage III) compared to patients with more than one invaded lymph nodes (advanced stage III). In this context, in order to understand the difference of activity of TIL therapy according to the progression of the illness at stage III, the first objective of the present study was to determine potential differences in the characteristics of TIL populations obtained from an early stage III and a more advanced stage III when tumor burden is more important. The second objective was to determine possible differences in tissue expression level of several molecules involved in interactions between tumor cells and T cells between early and advanced stage III considering that the tumor microenvironment of invaded lymph nodes could become more tolerant with the progression of the disease. A total of 47 samples of melanoma invaded LN from stage IIIb (AJCC 2007) melanoma patients treated with TIL plus IL-2 were included in this study. We confirmed that both PFS and OS were significantly associated to the presence of tumor-reactive T-cells among TIL injected to the patients and that these tumor reactive T cells were more frequently observed at the early stage III. Moreover, while analyzing the expression of 17 markers on 34/47 tumor specimens using immunohistochemistry, we identified that 3 tissue markers involved in interactions between melanoma cells and T cells have a significant difference of expression between early and advanced stage III: MHC class I, adhesion molecule ICAM-1 and the co-stimulation molecule LFA-3 had a significantly weaker expression in melanoma tissue specimens from advanced stage III. In addition, the expression of the alpha chain of the IL-2 receptor (CD25) and the nuclear transcription factor Foxp3 was significantly increased in the melanoma tissue specimens from advanced stage III. Our results suggest differences in the immunological status of the tumor microenvironment between early and advanced stage III, which could explain the difference in clinical response to TIL infusion in an adjuvant setting between early and advanced stage III.
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PMID:Tissue biomarkers in melanoma patients treated with TIL. 2328 20