| Literature DB >> 11912149 |
Danila Valmori1, Carmen Scheibenbogen, Valerie Dutoit, Dirk Nagorsen, Anne Marie Asemissen, Verena Rubio-Godoy, Donata Rimoldi, Philippe Guillaume, Pedro Romero, Dirk Schadendorf, Martin Lipp, Pierre-Yves Dietrich, Eckhard Thiel, Jean-Charles Cerottini, Danielle Liénard, Ulrich Keilholz.
Abstract
To defend the host from malignancies, the immune system can spontaneously raise CD8(+) T-cell responses against tumor antigens. Investigating the functional state of tumor-reactive cytolytic T cells in cancer patients is a key step for understanding the role of these cells in tumor immunosurveillance and for evaluating the potential of immunotherapeutic approaches of vaccination against cancer. In this study we identified a subset of circulating tumor-reactive CD8(+) T lymphocytes, which specifically secreted IFN-gamma after exposition to autologous tumor cell lines in stage IV metastatic melanoma patients. Additional phenotypic characterization using multicolor flow cytometry revealed that a significant fraction of these cells were CD45RA(+)CCR7(-), a phenotype that has been proposed recently to characterize cytolytic effectors potentially able to home into inflamed tissues. In the case of an HLA-A2-expressing patient, the antigen specificity of this population was identified by using HLA-A2/peptide multimers incorporating a tyrosinase-derived peptide. Consistently with their phenotypic characteristics, A2/tyrosinase peptide multimer(+) CD8(+) T cells, isolated by cell sorting, were directly lytic ex vivo and able to specifically recognize tyrosinase-expressing tumor cells. Overall, these results provide the first evidence that a proportion of melanoma patients have circulating tumor-reactive T cells, which are lytic effectors cells.Entities:
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Year: 2002 PMID: 11912149
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 12.701