| Literature DB >> 17640060 |
Julia Karbach1, Sacha Gnjatic2, Claudia Pauligk1, Armin Bender1, Markus Maeurer3, Joachim L Schultze4, Kerstin Nadler1, Claudia Wahle1, Alexander Knuth5, Lloyd J Old2, Elke Jäger1.
Abstract
A major objective of peptide vaccination is the induction of tumor-reactive CD8+ T-cells. We have shown that HLA-A2 positive cancer patients frequently develop an antigen-specific CD8+ T-cell response after vaccination with NY-ESO-1 peptides p157-165/p157-167. These T-cells are highly reactive with the peptides used for vaccination, but only rarely recognize HLA-matched, NY-ESO-1 expressing tumor cell lines. To address the apparent lack of tumor recognition of vaccine-induced CD8+ T-cell responses, we used autologous tumor cells for in vitro stimulation and expansion of pre- and postvaccine CD8+ T-cells. In contrast to standard presensitization methods with peptide-pulsed antigen-presenting cells, mixed lymphocyte tumor culture favored the selective expansion of low-frequency tumor-reactive T-cells. In four patients, we were able to demonstrate that antigen-specific and tumor-reactive T-cells are detectable and are indeed elicited as a result of NY-ESO-1 peptide vaccination. Further analyses of postvaccine antigen-specific T-cells at a clonal level show that vaccine-induced antigen-specific T-cells are heterogeneous in functional activity. These results suggest that the methods of immunomonitoring are critical to identify the proportion of tumor-reactive T-cells within the population of vaccine-induced antigen-specific effector cells. Our results show that immunization with NY-ESO-1 peptides leads to strong tumor-reactive CD8+ T-cell responses. Our findings suggest that approaches to peptide vaccination may be improved to induce higher numbers of antigen-specific T-cells and to selectively increase the proportion of CD8+ T-cells that have the capacity to recognize and eliminate tumor cells. Copyright (c) 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Entities:
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Year: 2007 PMID: 17640060 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.22957
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396