(2001).
" IL-2 during in vitro priming promotes subsequent engraftment and successful adoptive tumor immunotherapy by persistent memory phenotypic CD8(+) T cells.
"
J Immunol.
167,
4511-7.
PMID:
11591778
Adoptive T cell tumor immunotherapy potentially consists of two protective components by the transferred effector cells, the immediate immune response and the subsequent development of memory T cells. The extent by which adoptively transferred CD8(+) CTL are destined to become memory T cells is ambiguous as most studies focus on the acute effects on tumor shortly following adoptive transfer. In this study we show that a substantial fraction of the input CTL develop into memory cells that reject a s.c. tumor challenge. The use of exogenous IL-2 or a combination of IL-2 and IL-4, but not solely IL-4, during the ex vivo culture for the CTL inoculation was necessary for efficient development of CD8(+) memory T cells. Thus, an important component of adoptive immunotherapy using CTL is the production of CD8(+) Ag-specific memory cells which is primarily favored by IL-2 receptor signaling during ex vivo generation of the effector CTL.