The Department of Genetic Medicine at Weill Cornell leads a dynamic and innovative translational research program, advancing diverse fields such as Genetic Therapy and Personalized Medicine.
Our translational research program aims to leverage our expertise in genetic therapies and personalized medicine to develop clinical solutions that target the molecular causes of human diseases.
The Department of Genetic Medicine advances treatments and diagnostics through diverse clinical trials, including drug testing and research to better understand diseases.
The Department of Genetic Medicine at Weill Cornell leads a dynamic and innovative translational research program, advancing diverse fields such as Genetic Therapy and Personalized Medicine.
Our translational research program aims to leverage our expertise in genetic therapies and personalized medicine to develop clinical solutions that target the molecular causes of human diseases.
The Department of Genetic Medicine advances treatments and diagnostics through diverse clinical trials, including drug testing and research to better understand diseases.
Macrophage-derived chemokine is chemotactic for a variety of leukocytes, and has been shown to be involved in T 2-mediated cellular immunity. To evaluate the role of this chemokine in tumor immunity in vivo, an adenovirus vector encoding the human macrophage-derived chemokine cDNA (AdMDC) was administered to established murine tumors. Gene transfer with AdMDC significantly inhibited tumor growth and prolonged animal survival. AdMDC was not directly cytotoxic to tumor cells, but splenocytes from animals that received intratumoral AdMDC were able to lyse syngeneic tumor cells, and purified splenic CD8 cells secreted interferon-gamma in a tumor-specific manner. The antitumor activity of AdMDC was lost in mice lacking CD8 T lymphocytes, but surprisingly, it was preserved in animals lacking CD4 cells, as was the systemic cytotoxic T lymphocyte response. Systemic NK cells did not play a role in the antitumor immune response induced by AdMDC. Experiments using knockout mice demonstrated that host expression of MHC Class I, but not Class II, IL-4, or IL-12, was necessary for AdMDC to exert its antitumor effect, and immunohistochemistry demonstrated infiltrates of CD8 and CD86 cells, but not CD4 cells in treated tumors. These studies highlight a new function for macrophage-derived chemokine by demonstrating that it possesses in vivo antitumor activity with CD8 T cells as the effector cells, and interestingly, that the CD4 cell/MHC II pathway of CD8 cell activation is not required for the antitumor effects of this chemokine.(H)