| Literature DB >> 11250753 |
Abstract
Continued progress in the development of antigen-specific breast cancer vaccines depends on the identification of appropriate target antigens, the establishment of effective immunization strategies, and the ability to circumvent immune escape mechanisms. Methods such as T cell epitope cloning and serological expression cloning (SEREX) have led to the identification of a number target antigens expressed in breast cancer. Improved immunization strategies, such as using dendritic cells to present tumor-associated antigens to T lymphocytes, have been shown to induce antigen-specific T cell responses in vivo and, in some cases, objective clinical responses. An outcome of successful tumor immunity is the evolution of antigen-loss tumor variants. The development of a polyvalent breast cancer vaccine, directed against a panel of tumor-associated antigens, may counteract this form of immune escape.Entities:
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Year: 2001 PMID: 11250753 PMCID: PMC139438 DOI: 10.1186/bcr278
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Breast Cancer Res ISSN: 1465-5411 Impact factor: 6.466
Potential targets for antigen-specific breast cancer vaccines and their frequency of mRNA expression, amplification/overexpression1 or mutation2 in breast cancer
| Target antigen | Expression in breast cancer | Reference |
| Differentiation antigens | ||
| Carcinoembryonic antigen | 50% | [ |
| NY-BR-1 | 80% | [ |
| Cancer-testis antigens | ||
| NY-ESO-1 | 24% | [ |
| MAGE-1 | 8% | [ |
| MAGE-3 | 14% | [ |
| BAGE | 2% | [ |
| GAGE | 8% | [ |
| SCP-1 | 31% | [ |
| SSX-1 | 12% | [ |
| SSX-2 | 8% | [ |
| SSX-4 | 14% | [ |
| CT-7 | 30% | [ |
| Amplified/overexpressed antigens | ||
| Her2/neu | 40%1 | [ |
| NY-BR-62 | 60%1 | [ |
| NY-BR-85 | 90%1 | [ |
| Tumor protein D52 | 60%1 | [ |
| Mutational antigens | ||
| p53 | 17%2 | [ |