Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
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Preclinical studies with Fc(gamma)R bispecific antibodies and granulocyte colony-stimulating factor-primed neutrophils as effector cells against HER-2/neu overexpressing breast cancer.

Cancer Research 1997 Februrary 16
Immunotherapies directed to the proto-oncogene product HER-2/neu, which is overexpressed on a subset of breast and other carcinomas, currently receive considerable attention. We have investigated cell-mediated effector mechanisms of HER-2/neu antibodies against breast cancer cell lines. Compared to unfractionated control blood, whole blood from patients during granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) treatment exhibits significantly enhanced lysis (P < 0.001) of SK-BR-3 cells in the presence of HER-2/neu antibody 520C9. The extent of tumor cell killing correlated positively (r = 0.74) to polymorphonuclear neutrophil (PMN) blood counts. Fractionation of whole blood into plasma, mononuclear cells, and PMNs showed major killing capacity to reside in the granulocyte fraction. PMNs were efficiently cytolytic with a panel of HER-2/neu antibodies and against various breast cancer cell lines. Experiments with blocking antibodies to Fc(gamma)R documented Fc(gamma)RII (CD32) as the major trigger molecule for monoclonal antibody 502C9-mediated cytotoxicity. Killing via 520C9 was significantly influenced by an allotypic polymorphism of Fc(gamma)RIIa, the CD32 molecule expressed on PMNs. In reverse antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity experiments with a panel of HER-2/neu-directed bispecific antibodies, Fc(gamma)RIII (CD16) proved to be an efficient trigger molecule in blood from healthy volunteers. During G-CSF treatment, however, Fc(gamma)RI (CD64)-expressed on monocytes and G-CSF primed, but not on healthy donor PMNs-became the predominant cytotoxic trigger molecule. Thus, G-CSF application increased effector cell numbers for HER-2/neu-directed immunotherapy, and G-CSF primed PMNs proved particularly effective with a [HER-2/neu x Fc(gamma)RI] bispecific antibody. These findings support clinical trials with HER-2/neu-directed antibodies in combination with G-CSF in breast cancer patients overexpressing HER-2/neu.

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