Abstract

B7-H1, a recently described member of the B7 family of costimulatory molecules, is thought to be involved in the regulation of cellular and humoral immune responses through the PD-1 receptor on activated T and B cells. We report here that, except for cells of the macrophage lineage, normal human tissues do not express B7-H1. In contrast, B7-H1 is abundant in human carcinomas of lung, ovary and colon and in melanomas. The pro-inflammatory cytokine interferon-gamma upregulates B7-H1 on the surface of tumor cell lines. Cancer cell-associated B7-H1 increases apoptosis of antigen-specific human T-cell clones in vitro, and the apoptotic effect of B7-H1 is mediated largely by one or more receptors other than PD-1. In addition, expression of B7-H1 on mouse P815 tumor increases apoptosis of activated tumor-reactive T cells and promotes the growth of highly immunogenic B7-1(+) tumors in vivo. These findings have implications for the design of T cell-based cancer immunotherapy.

Keywords

BiologyImmune systemApoptosisT cellImmunotherapyCytokineCancer researchImmunologyAntigenReceptorCell biology

MeSH Terms

AnimalsAntibodiesMonoclonalAntigensCDAntigensSurfaceAntineoplastic AgentsApoptosisApoptosis Regulatory ProteinsB7-1 AntigenB7-H1 AntigenBlood ProteinsCell SeparationFas Ligand ProteinFemaleFlow CytometryHumansLymphocyte ActivationMelanomaMembrane GlycoproteinsMiceMiceInbred StrainsNeoplasmsPeptidesProgrammed Cell Death 1 ReceptorRecombinant Fusion ProteinsSignal TransductionT-LymphocytesCytotoxicTNF-Related Apoptosis-Inducing LigandTumor CellsCulturedTumor EscapeTumor Necrosis Factor-alpha

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Publication Info

Year
2002
Type
article
Volume
8
Issue
8
Pages
793-800
Citations
4896
Access
Closed

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4896
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56
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Cite This

Haidong Dong, Scott E. Strome, Diva R. Salomão et al. (2002). Tumor-associated B7-H1 promotes T-cell apoptosis: A potential mechanism of immune evasion. Nature Medicine , 8 (8) , 793-800. https://doi.org/10.1038/nm730

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/nm730
PMID
12091876

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%