Murine studies have suggested that a population of CD4+ T cells expressing the alpha chain of the
interleukin (IL)-2 receptor (CD25+) are phenotypically anergic in response to
T cell receptor stimulation and can suppress the function of CD4+ and CD8+ T cells. Recent studies of peripheral lymphocytes from healthy human volunteers have identified a similar population, although little is known about the presence and activity of these cells in patients with
cancer and their possible impact on anticancer immunization strategies. Thus, the authors have undertaken these studies in patients with metastatic
melanoma undergoing immunizations with known
melanoma antigens. CD4+ CD25+, CD4+ CD25-, and a 1:1 ratio of these isolated T cells were stimulated with soluble anti-CD3 antibody in the presence of irradiated T cell-depleted PBMCs, and proliferation was assessed by measuring [3H]
thymidine incorporation. In 13 patients, isolated CD4+CD25+ T cells proliferated 68% (+/- 5.8%) less than separately cultured CD4+ CD25- T cells. Moreover, CD4+ CD25+ T cells suppressed the proliferation of an equal number of cocultured CD4+ CD25+ T cells in 11 of 13 patients by an average of 60% (+/- 4.9%). Suppression was not seen at day three of culture and became apparent at days five through nine. The degree of suppression was proportional to the numbers of CD4+ CD25+ T cells. Addition of high-dose
IL-2 reversed the hypoproliferative phenotype of the CD4+ CD25+ T cells and abrogated their suppressive function. These studies demonstrate that anergic and functionally suppressive CD4+ CD25+ T cells exist in patients with
melanoma undergoing
tumor antigen immunization and thus may play a role in modifying the magnitude of the T cell response to immunization.