Literature DB >> 16918445

Immunology of O-glycosylated proteins: approaches to the design of a MUC1 glycopeptide-based tumor vaccine.

Franz-Georg Hanisch1, Tanja Ninkovic.   

Abstract

Until about 1990 there was general consent about the assumption that only protein and peptide antigens have the capacity of CD4(+) or CD8(+) T-cell stimulation. Since about ten years evidence is now accumulating that carbohydrate-peptide epitopes do play a role in classical MHC-mediated immune responses. This holds true for glycopeptides, where the glycan chain is short and not located at an "anchor residue" needed for MHC interaction. T-cell recognition of O-glycosylated peptides is potentially of high biomedical significance, because it can mediate the immune protection against microorganisms, the vaccination in anti-tumor therapies, but also some aspects of autoimmunity. The epithelial type 1 transmembrane mucin MUC1 is established as a marker for monitoring recurrence of breast cancer and is a promising target for immunotherapeutic strategies to treat cancer by active specific immunization. Natural human immune responses to the tumor-associated glycoforms of the mucin indicate that antibody reactivities are more directed to glycopeptide than to non-glycosylated peptide epitopes. To overcome the weak immunogenicity of the natural target, heavily O-glycosylated MUC1, the question was addressed whether O-linked glycans remain intact during processing in the MHC class II pathway and interfere with endosomal processing and peptide presentation. Attempts were made to define on a biochemical level the structural requirements for an efficient endosomal proteolysis catalyzed by cathepsin L in antigen-presenting cells. Evidence based on work with CD4(+) T-hybridomas confirms that O-glycopeptides can be effectively presented to T-cells and that glycans can form integral parts of the TCR defined epitopes. Similar approaches are currently followed in the MHC class I pathway which aim at the identification of immunogenic glycopeptides generated by immunoproteasomes.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16918445     DOI: 10.2174/138920306778018034

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Protein Pept Sci        ISSN: 1389-2037            Impact factor:   3.272


  16 in total

1.  Antibody recognition of a unique tumor-specific glycopeptide antigen.

Authors:  Cory L Brooks; Andrea Schietinger; Svetlana N Borisova; Peter Kufer; Mark Okon; Tomoko Hirama; C Roger Mackenzie; Lai-Xi Wang; Hans Schreiber; Stephen V Evans
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2010-05-17       Impact factor: 11.205

Review 2.  Post-translationally modified T cell epitopes: immune recognition and immunotherapy.

Authors:  Jan Petersen; Anthony W Purcell; Jamie Rossjohn
Journal:  J Mol Med (Berl)       Date:  2009-09-08       Impact factor: 4.599

3.  Vaccine against MUC1 antigen expressed in inflammatory bowel disease and cancer lessens colonic inflammation and prevents progression to colitis-associated colon cancer.

Authors:  Pamela L Beatty; Sowmya Narayanan; Jean Gariépy; Sarangarajan Ranganathan; Olivera J Finn
Journal:  Cancer Prev Res (Phila)       Date:  2010-03-23

4.  Linear synthesis and immunological properties of a fully synthetic vaccine candidate containing a sialylated MUC1 glycopeptide.

Authors:  Pamela Thompson; Vani Lakshminarayanan; Nitin T Supekar; Judy M Bradley; Peter A Cohen; Margreet A Wolfert; Sandra J Gendler; Geert-Jan Boons
Journal:  Chem Commun (Camb)       Date:  2015-05-29       Impact factor: 6.222

5.  Recent Development in Carbohydrate Based Anti-cancer Vaccines.

Authors:  Zhaojun Yin; Xuefei Huang
Journal:  J Carbohydr Chem       Date:  2012-02-29       Impact factor: 1.667

6.  Immune recognition of tumor-associated mucin MUC1 is achieved by a fully synthetic aberrantly glycosylated MUC1 tripartite vaccine.

Authors:  Vani Lakshminarayanan; Pamela Thompson; Margreet A Wolfert; Therese Buskas; Judy M Bradley; Latha B Pathangey; Cathy S Madsen; Peter A Cohen; Sandra J Gendler; Geert-Jan Boons
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2011-12-14       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Adaptive immune activation: glycosylation does matter.

Authors:  Margreet A Wolfert; Geert-Jan Boons
Journal:  Nat Chem Biol       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 15.040

8.  An Immunoinformatics Approach for SARS-CoV-2 in Latam Populations and Multi-Epitope Vaccine Candidate Directed towards the World's Population.

Authors:  Andrés Felipe Cuspoca; Laura Lorena Díaz; Alvaro Fernando Acosta; Marcela Katherine Peñaloza; Yardany Rafael Méndez; Diana Carolina Clavijo; Juvenal Yosa Reyes
Journal:  Vaccines (Basel)       Date:  2021-06-01

9.  Natural and Induced Humoral Responses to MUC1.

Authors:  Silvia Von Mensdorff-Pouilly; Maria Moreno; René H M Verheijen
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2011-07-29       Impact factor: 6.639

10.  Sialyl-tn in cancer: (how) did we miss the target?

Authors:  Sylvain Julien; Paula A Videira; Philippe Delannoy
Journal:  Biomolecules       Date:  2012-10-11
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