scholarly journals Role ofIn VitroStimulation with Lipopolysaccharide on T-Cell Activation in HIV-Infected Antiretroviral-Treated Patients

2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Camilla Tincati ◽  
Giusi M. Bellistrì ◽  
Giuseppe Ancona ◽  
Esther Merlini ◽  
Antonella d’Arminio Monforte ◽  
...  

We investigated the effect of LPSin vitrostimulation on T-cell activation in HIV-infected patients with different CD4+ recovery on HAART. PBMCs from 30 HIV-positive, HAART-treated, aviremic individuals with different CD4+ reconstitution (Low Responders: CD4+ < 350/μL; Intermediate Responders: CD4+ 350–599/μL; High Responders: CD4+ ≥ 600/μL) were cultured with LPS and the proportion of HLA-DR/CD38- and Ki67-expressing CD4+/CD8+ T-cells was measured (flow cytometry). Upon LPS stimulation, significantly higher CD4+ and CD8+HLA-DR+ cells were shown in LR and IR versus HIV-negative controls. While no differences in the proportion of LPS-stimulated CD4+CD38+ cells were recorded amongst HIV-positive subgroups, CD8+CD38+ cells were more elevated in patients with lower CD4+ recovery on HAART (i.e., LR and IR). Uponin vitroLPS stimulation, HLA-DR and CD38 expression on T-cells are differentially regulated. While HLA-DR induction reflects impaired CD4+ reconstitution on HAART, cell-surface CD38 expression is increased only on CD8+ T-cells, allowing to speculate that the sole induction of CD38 on CD4+ cells may not be sufficient to depict LPS-driven immune activation in HIV.

2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marie-Line Puiffe ◽  
Aurélie Dupont ◽  
Nouhoum Sako ◽  
Jérôme Gatineau ◽  
José L. Cohen ◽  
...  

IL4I1 is an immunoregulatory enzyme that inhibits CD8 T-cell proliferation in vitro and in the tumoral context. Here, we dissected the effect of IL4I1 on CD8 T-cell priming by studying the differentiation of a transgenic CD8 T-cell clone and the endogenous repertoire in a mouse model of acute lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (LCMV) infection. Unexpectedly, we show that IL4I1 accelerates the expansion of functional effector CD8 T cells during the first several days after infection and increases the average affinity of the elicited repertoire, supporting more efficient LCMV clearance in WT mice than IL4I1-deficient mice. Conversely, IL4I1 restrains the differentiation of CD8 T-cells into long-lived memory precursors and favors the memory response to the most immunodominant peptides. IL4I1 expression does not affect the phenotype or antigen-presenting functions of dendritic cells (DCs), but directly reduces the stability of T-DC immune synapses in vitro, thus dampening T-cell activation. Overall, our results support a model in which IL4I1 increases the threshold of T-cell activation, indirectly promoting the priming of high-affinity clones while limiting memory T-cell differentiation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alana MacDonald ◽  
Brandon Lam ◽  
John Lin ◽  
Louise Ferrall ◽  
Yu Jui Kung ◽  
...  

The phospholipid phosphatidylserine (PS) is naturally maintained on the cytoplasmic side of the plasma membrane. Independent of apoptosis, PS is redistributed to the surface of CD8 T cells in response to TCR-mediated activation. Annexin V (AnnV) is a protein known to bind PS with high affinity and has been effectively utilized to anchor antigen to the surface of CD8 T cells. To expand these studies, we aimed to exploit TCR activation driven PS exposure as a target to deliver cytokine, namely interleukin-2 (IL-2), to the surface of CD8 T cells. This was accomplished using a novel chimeric fusion protein of annexin V and interleukin 2 (AnnV-IL2). In vitro analysis revealed that AnnV-IL2 is able to specifically bind PS on the T cell surface following TCR stimulation. Consequently, AnnV-IL2 proved to be significantly more effective at enhancing T cell activation compared to recombinant IL-2. In vivo, AnnV-IL2 promotes robust expansion of antigen-specific cells capable of interferon gamma (IFNγ) production when administered following peptide vaccination. Importantly, upon antigen rechallenge, AnnV-IL2 treatment mice demonstrated a stronger secondary expansion, indicating durability of AnnV-IL2 mediated responses. Our data supports the use of AnnV-IL2 to modulate antigen-specific T cell immunity and demonstrates that the PS-AnnV axis is a feasible mechanism to target diverse cargo to CD8 T cells.


2020 ◽  
Vol 79 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 988.2-988
Author(s):  
K. Ghannam ◽  
L. Martinez Gamboa ◽  
C. Kedor ◽  
L. Spengler ◽  
G. R. Burmester ◽  
...  

Background:Abatacept (CTLA4-Ig) is a biological DMARD (bDMARD) for treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and selectively modulates the co-stimulatory signal by CD28: CD80/CD86 interaction required for T cell activation. CD28 mediated signaling regulates many T cell functions including cytokine production. The role of proteasome was approved in many autoimmune diseases, and the effect of Abatacept on modifying cytokines including interferon-γ that alters proteasome proteolytic activities was shown in RA.Objectives:To characterize the effect of Abatacept on the expression and proteolytic activity of the immunoproteasome.Methods:Effects of Abatacept on the proteasome system were investigated in 39 patients with rheumatoid arthritis over a period of 24 weeks. Using real time PCR, transcript expression levels of constitutive and corresponding immunoproteasome catalytic subunits were investigated at baseline (T0), week 16 (T16) and week 24 (T24) in sorted blood cells. Proteasomal activity and induction of apoptosis after proteasome inhibition were also evaluated in cellular subsets.Results:Upon treatment with Abatacept, remission or low disease activity according to DAS28 was achieved in 55 % of patients at T16 and in 70 % at T24. By Two- (time and type of response) way ANOVA, a significant reduction of proteasome immunosubunit β1i expression was shown only in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells of prolonged responders at both T16 and T24 (P= 0.0390 andP= 0.0198, respectively). One-way ANOVA analysis for each response group separately confirmed the results and showed significant reduction at T24;P= 0.0396 difference between T0 and T24,P= 0.0260 between T16 and T24 in CD4+ T cells of the same group. Abatacept did not influence chymotrypsin like activity of proteasome, which is carried out by the subunit β5i and had no effect on induction of apoptosis under exposure to a proteasome inhibitor in-vitro.Conclusion:Treatment with Abatacept showed a clear effect on the expression of the proteasome immunosubunit β1i. This phenomenon was only seen in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells of prolonged responding patients with RA suggesting an association between persistent induction of β1i and failure to the T cell directed therapy with Abatacept.References:[1]Keating, G.M., Abatacept: A Review of its Use in the Management of Rheumatoid Arthritis. Drugs, 2013. 73(10): p. 1095-1119.[2]Ferrington, D.A. and D.S. Gregerson, Immunoproteasomes: Structure, Function, and Antigen Presentation. Progress in molecular biology and translational science, 2012. 109: p. 75-112.[3]Marti, L., et al., Alterations in Cytokine Profile and Dendritic Cells Subsets in Peripheral Blood of Rheumatoid Arthritis Patients before and after Biologic Therapy. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2009. 1173: p. 334-42.Disclosure of Interests:Khetam Ghannam: None declared, Lorena Martinez Gamboa: None declared, Claudia Kedor Consultant of: Advisory Board for Novartis Pharma GmbH, Lydia Spengler: None declared, Gerd Rüdiger Burmester Consultant of: AbbVie Inc, Eli Lilly, Gilead, Janssen, Merck, Roche, Pfizer, and UCB Pharma, Speakers bureau: AbbVie Inc, Eli Lilly, Gilead, Janssen, Merck, Roche, Pfizer, and UCB Pharma, Eugen Feist Consultant of: Novartis, Roche, Sobi, Lilly, Pfizer, Abbvie, BMS, MSD, Sanofi, Speakers bureau: Novartis, Roche, Sobi, Lilly, Pfizer, Abbvie, BMS, MSD, Sanofi


Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 4517-4517 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benedetta Rambaldi ◽  
Carol Reynolds ◽  
Sharmila Chamling Rai ◽  
Takeru Asano ◽  
Yohei Arihara ◽  
...  

CD6 is a co-stimulatory receptor expressed on T cells that binds activated leukocyte cell adhesion molecule (ALCAM), a ligand expressed on antigen presenting cells and various epithelial and endothelial tissues. The CD6-ALCAM pathway plays an integral role in modulating T cell activation, proliferation and trafficking and is central to inflammation. Early studies by Soiffer et al. demonstrated that ex vivo depletion of CD6+ donor cells prior to hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) decreased the incidence of acute graft versus host disease (aGVHD), highlighting the importance of CD6+ cells in GVHD pathogenesis. Itolizumab, a humanized anti-CD6 monoclonal antibody, has been shown to modulate T cell activation and proliferation. The aim of this study was to characterize: (1) expression of CD6 and ALCAM, and (2) activity of itolizumab on T cell responses in peripheral blood from HCT patients pre- and post-aGvHD. We analyzed immune reconstitution in 31 adult patients who underwent HLA matched donor HCT for hematological malignancies. Patients received peripheral blood stem cell grafts and GVHD prophylaxis with tacrolimus and methotrexate. Twelve of 31 patients developed aGVHD at a median of 58 days, range 27-208, after HCT and systemic treatment was started in 83% of these cases. aGVHD grade severity was 25%, 58.3% and 16.7% of grade I, II and IV, respectively. Patient samples were collected at 1, 2 and 3 months after HCT and analyzed using multi-color flow cytometry. Nine healthy donors (HD) were analyzed as controls. Suppressive activity of itolizumab was tested using peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) obtained from HD and patients before (preGVHD) and after (postGVHD) aGvHD onset (within 30 days). PBMC were stimulated with antiCD3/CD2/CD28 coated beads in the presence of itolizumab or isotype control (cetuximab) for 72 hours. T cell proliferation was measured by CFSE dilution, while T cell activation and maturation was measured by expression of CD25 and CD45RO, respectively. For statistical analysis, non-parametric unpaired (Mann-Whitney) or paired (Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed rank) test were used. CD6+ T cells reconstituted early after transplant, accounting for 95% of positive CD3 T cells, range 57-100 at 1 month. Similar to HD PBMC, in the first 3 months after HCT, CD4 Tcon had the highest CD6 expression, while CD4 Treg had a lower CD6 expression compared to both CD4 Tcon and CD8 T cells (Fig 1A and 1B). To characterize the expression of CD6 on different T cell subsets, we used a t-Distributed Stochastic Neighbor Embedding (t-SNE) algorithm and visualized the data using a viSNE map (Fig 1C). Within the Tcon compartment, there were no differences in expression of CD6 between HD and patients at all 3 time points. Within CD4 Treg and CD8 T cells, CD6 expression was reduced in naïve CD8 T cells and CM Treg after transplant compared to HD. In HD, ALCAM expression was detected in 35% of CD14+ monocytes, 23% of CD19+ B cells, 20% of myeloid (CD11c+ CD123-) DCs and 97% of plasmacytoid (CD11c-CD123+) DCs. After HCT, expression of ALCAM in DC compartments was similar to HD. In functional studies, itolizumab inhibited CD4 and CD8 T cell proliferation in preGVHD samples, similar to HD controls. This effect was less prominent in samples collected from patients who had developed GVHD and were already receiving immunosuppressive medications, potentially confounding the ability to assess the effect of itolizumab in this assay (Fig 2A). Similar results were observed for CD25 (Fig 2B) and CD45RO (Fig 2C) expression pre- and post-aGVHD. Finally, itolizumab did not increase rates of cell death in samples from HCT patients as assessed by Annexin V expression, suggesting that itolizumab-mediated T cell inhibition was not due to increased T cell apoptosis. There was a slight increase in Annexin V expression in HD vs isotype control (21%, range 10-43 vs 15%, range 11-31, p= 0.0273). In conclusion, we demonstrate for the first time that CD6+ T cells reconstitute rapidly in peripheral blood after HCT and that CD6 expression is highest in Tcon while lowest in Treg (Tcon>CD8>Treg). Itolizumab efficiently inhibits T cell proliferation and activation after in vitro TCR stimulation of PBMC from aGvHD patients, thus representing a potential therapeutic for treating aGvHD. A phase I/II study using itolizumab as first line treatment in combination with steroids for patients with aGVHD is currently ongoing (NCT03763318). Disclosures Rambaldi: Equillium: Research Funding. Koreth:Amgen: Consultancy; Cugene: Consultancy; Equillium: Consultancy. Cutler:Pharmacyclics: Consultancy; Omeros: Consultancy; Kadmon: Consultancy; BiolineRx: Other: DSMB; Cellect: Other: DSMB; Kalytera: Other: DSMB; ElsaLys: Consultancy; Genentech: Consultancy; BMS: Consultancy; Jazz: Consultancy; Incyte: Consultancy; Fate Therapeutics: Consultancy. Nikiforow:Kite/Gilead: Honoraria; Novartis: Honoraria; NKarta: Honoraria. Ho:Omeros Corporation: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees; Jazz Pharmaceuticals: Research Funding; Jazz Pharmaceuticals: Consultancy. Soiffer:Jazz: Consultancy; Gilead, Mana therapeutic, Cugene, Jazz: Consultancy; Juno, kiadis: Membership on an entity's Board of Directors or advisory committees, Other: DSMB; Cugene: Consultancy; Mana therapeutic: Consultancy; Kiadis: Other: supervisory board. Ampudia:Equillium: Employment. Ng:Equillium: Employment, Equity Ownership. Connelly:Equillium: Employment, Equity Ownership. Ritz:Equillium: Research Funding; Merck: Research Funding; Kite Pharma: Research Funding; Aleta Biotherapeutics: Consultancy; Celgene: Consultancy; Avrobio: Consultancy; LifeVault Bio: Consultancy; TScan Therapeutics: Consultancy; Talaris Therapeutics: Consultancy; Draper Labs: Consultancy.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Fernandez-Garcia ◽  
Fabien Franco ◽  
Sweta Parik ◽  
Antonino A Pane ◽  
Dorien Broekaert ◽  
...  

Cytotoxic T cells dynamically rewire their metabolism during the course of an immune response. While T cell metabolism has been extensively studied at phenotypic endpoints of activation and differentiation, the underlying dynamics remain largely elusive. Here, we leverage on single-cell RNA-sequencing (scRNA-seq) measurements of in vitro activated and differentiated CD8+ T cells cultured in physiological media to resolve these metabolic dynamics. We find that our scRNA-seq analysis identifies most metabolic changes previously defined in in vivo experiments, such as a rewiring from an oxidative to an anabolism-promoting metabolic program during activation to an effector state, which is later reverted upon memory polarization. Importantly, our scRNA-seq data further provide a dynamic description of these changes. In this sense, our data predict a differential time-dependent reliance of CD8+ T cells on the synthesis versus uptake of various non-essential amino acids during T cell activation, which we corroborate with additional functional in vitro experiments. We further exploit our scRNA-seq data to identify metabolic genes that could potentially dictate the outcome of T cell differentiation, by ranking them based on their expression dynamics. Among the highest-ranked hits, we find asparagine synthetase (Asns), whose expression sharply peaks for effector CD8+ T cells and further decays towards memory polarization. We then confirm that these in vitro Asns expression dynamics are representative of an in vivo situation in a mouse model of viral infection. Moreover, we find that disrupting these expression dynamics in vitro, by depleting asparagine from the culture media, delays central-memory polarization. Accordingly, we find that preventing the decay of ASNS by stable overexpression at the protein level in vivo leads to a significant increase in effector CD8+ T cell expansion, and a concomitant decrease in central-memory formation, in a mouse model of viral infection. This shows that ASNS expression dynamics dictate the fate of CD8+ T cell differentiation. In conclusion, we provide a resource of dynamic expression changes during CD8+ T cell activation and differentiation that is expected to increase our understanding of the dynamic metabolic requirements of T cells progressing along the immune response cascade.


RMD Open ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. e001248
Author(s):  
Khetam Ghannam ◽  
Lorena Martinez Gamboa ◽  
Claudia Kedor ◽  
Lydia Spengler ◽  
Ulrike Kuckelkorn ◽  
...  

ObjectiveAbatacept is a biological disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) used for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and modulates the costimulatory signal by cluster of differentiation (CD)28:CD80/CD86 interaction required for T cell activation. Since CD28-mediated signalling regulates many T cell functions including cytokine production of, for example, interferons (IFNs), it is of interest to clarify, whether response to abatacept has an effect on the IFN inducible immunoproteasome, as a central regulator of the immune response.MethodsEffects of abatacept on the proteasome were investigated in 39 patients with RA over a period of 24 weeks. Using real-time PCR, transcript levels of constitutive and corresponding immunoproteasome catalytic subunits were investigated at baseline (T0), week 16 (T16) and week 24 (T24) in sorted blood cells. Proteasomal activity and induction of apoptosis after proteasome inhibition were also evaluated.ResultsAbatacept achieved remission or low disease activity in 55% of patients at T16 and in 70% of patients at T24. By two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA), a significant reduction of proteasome immunosubunit β1i was shown only in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells of sustained responders at both T16 and T24. One-way ANOVA analysis for each response group confirmed the results and showed a significant reduction at T24 in CD4+ and CD8+ T cells of the same group. Abatacept did not influence chymotrypsin-like activity of proteasome and had no effect on induction of apoptosis under exposure to a proteasome inhibitor in vitro.ConclusionThe reduction of proteasome immunosubunit β1i in T cells of patients with RA with sustained response to abatacept suggests association of the immunoproteasome of T cells with RA disease activity.


2019 ◽  
Vol 69 (2) ◽  
pp. 163-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
Linlin Zhou ◽  
Mei Ruan ◽  
Ying Liu ◽  
Yanyang Zhu ◽  
Deqiang Fu ◽  
...  

AbstractB7 homolog 4 (B7H4) is considered a negative regulator of immune responses, but the immunoregulatory role of B7H4 in the tumor microenvironment is not clear. Here, we assessed B7H4 expression cell types in human breast cancer tissues and addressed its potential mechanisms in the CD8 T cell immune response. The results from flow cytometry and immunohistochemistry demonstrated that B7H4 was highly expressed in 26 out of 30 (86.7%) breast invasive ductal carcinomas, and B7H4 surface expression on tumor cells was inversely correlated with CD8 T lymphocytes infiltration (p < 0.0001). In vivo, B7H4-overexpressing tumor cells showed enhanced tumor growth in immunocompetent mice with impaired CD8 T cell infiltration of the tumor. Further investigation showed that activation and expansion of CD8 T cells within the lymph nodes were suppressed in B7H4-overexpessing tumor-bearing mice. An in vitro killing assay showed that the cytotoxicity of CD8 T cells was inhibited in B7H4-overexpressing tumor cells. These findings suggest that B7H4 in tumor cells is a negative regulator of CD8 T cell activation, expansion and cytotoxicity, indicating that tumor cell-associated B7H4 might be a target for T cell-based cancer immunotherapy.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (7) ◽  
pp. 1970-1978 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vladia Monsurrò ◽  
Ena Wang ◽  
Yoshisha Yamano ◽  
Stephen A. Migueles ◽  
Monica C. Panelli ◽  
...  

Abstract In a human melanoma model of tumor antigen (TA)–based immunization, we tested the functional status of TA-specific CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes. A “quiescent” phenotype lacking direct ex vivo cytotoxic and proliferative potential was identified that was further characterized by comparing its transcriptional profile to that of TA-specific T cells sensitized in vitro by exposure to the same TA and the T-cell growth factor interleukin 2 (IL-2). Quiescent circulating tumor-specific CD8+ T cells were deficient in expression of genes associated with T-cell activation, proliferation, and effector function. This quiescent status may explain the observed lack of correlation between the presence of circulating immunization-induced lymphocytes and tumor regression. In addition, the activation of TA-specific T cells by in vitro antigen recall and IL-2 suggests that a complete effector phenotype might be reinstated in vivo to fulfill the potential of anticancer vaccine protocols.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A686-A686
Author(s):  
Nataliya Prokhnevska ◽  
Maria Cardenas ◽  
Rajesh Valanparambil ◽  
Ewelina Sobierajska ◽  
Caroline Jansen ◽  
...  

BackgroundCD8 T cell are a crucial part of the immune response to tumors, with CD8 infiltration predicting disease progression in numerous cancer types. Recently two subsets of CD8 T cells that respond to tumors have been described, a stem-like (TCF1+) CD8 T cell that can give rise to a more cytotoxic terminally differentiated (TD) (TCF1-Tim3+) CD8 T cell. In this study we aimed to understand the origin of stem-like TCF1+ CD8 T cells within tumors.MethodsHuman patient TDLN and tumor samples from kidney and prostate cancer were processed after resection and used for flow cytometry, RNA-seq, TCR-seq and whole genome DNA methylation analysis. We also used a prostate cancer mouse model that expresses the LCMV GP protein (TRAMPC1-LCMV-GP) to track tumor-specific CD8 T cells in both TDLNs and tumors.ResultsWe studied human prostate and kidney cancer tumor-draining lymph nodes (TDLN) and found that CD8 T cells are activated but fail to acquire an effector phenotype within the TDLN. Instead, they share functional, transcriptional, and epigenetic traits with stem-like cells in the tumor. We also found that activated CD8 T cells from TDLNs shared TCR overlap with both CD8 subsets within tumors. This suggests that these activated cells are a precursor to the stem-like CD8 T cells in tumors. To further test this hypothesis, we used our TRAMPC1-LCMV-GP tumor model to study tumor-specific CD8 T cell activation. We found that CD8 T cells are activated in TDLNs but fail to acquire an effector program. These cells then establish the stem-like CD8s within tumor where they require additional co-stimulation from antigen presenting cells to differentiate into TCF1- TD CD8 T cells. This is strikingly different from canonical CD8 T cell activation to acute viruses, where the effector program is acquired immediately. We also showed that human stem-like CD8 T cells require co-stimulation and TCR stimulation to divide and differentiate into terminally differentiated CD8s in-vitro, and DCs from autologous tumors can also induce this differentiation.ConclusionsOverall this work shows a model of CD8 T cell activation in response to tumors that has two distinct phases. The first occurs in the TDLN where CD8 T cells are initially activated, the second occurs in the tumor where CD8 T cells acquire an effector function after additional co-stimulation. This model of T cell differentiation adds to our understanding of basic CD8 T cell biology and has important implications to improve our current immunotherapies.


2020 ◽  
Vol 8 (Suppl 3) ◽  
pp. A831-A831
Author(s):  
Tienan Wang ◽  
Qing Lin ◽  
Jie Zhang

BackgroundCancer immunotherapies, including immune checkpoint inhibitors, CAR-T, cancer vaccines and bispecific antibodies, have been brought to spot light in recent years as several therapeutic strategies targeting the immune system have produced exciting clinical results. Bispecific antibody typically play dual roles in blocking the immune checkpoint and redirecting/re-boosting the function of the immune effector cells. Blinatumomab belongs to CD3 bispecific T cell engager (CD3 BiTE), which was engineered to harbor two arms binding with CD3 and CD19 simultaneously and direct CD8+ T cells to specifically recognize CD19 positive lymphoma cells to execute cytotoxicity. Approval of Blinatumomab for patients with relapse/refractory B cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) has driven remarkable increase in combination studies of Blinatumomab with other immunotherapies such as checkpoint inhibitors.MethodsIn this study, we developed CD8+ T cytotoxic system targeting different B lymphoma cell line and fully validated the function of Blinatumomab in promoting target tumor cell lysis by primary CD8+ T cells (figure 1). In addition, we established a mixed lymphocyte and tumor system to mimic physiological TME to dissect the combinational role of Nivolumab and Blinatumomab (figure 2).ResultsThe result suggest that combinatory therapy is highly depend on the dosage of Blinatumomab and also T cell number in the TME, which might give an instruction for ongoing clinical trial design. Finally, we have employed humanized mouse models bearing Raji or Daudi tumor cells to further validate this combination treatment in vivo. Both In-vivo and In-vitro data support that Blinatumomab is dominant in activing T cell and Nivolumab can only exhibit synergistic effect under suboptimal dosage of Blinatumomab.Abstract 781 Figure 1Establishment of In vitro co-culture system for CD3 BiTEestablish in vitro human PBMC based system to validate CD3 BiTE functionAbstract 781 Figure 2Opdivo and CD3 BiTE CombinationOpdivo could further promote T cell activation under the treatment of CD3 BiTEConclusionsSuccessfully establish in vitro system to evaluate the function of CD3 BiTE and also take advantage of MLR/tumor co-culture system to demonstrate PD1 antibody could further promote T cell activation under appropriate dosage of CD3 BiTE.


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