Literature DB >> 21216894

Antigen spreading contributes to MAGE vaccination-induced regression of melanoma metastases.

Véronique Corbière1, Jacques Chapiro, Vincent Stroobant, Wenbin Ma, Christophe Lurquin, Bernard Lethé, Nicolas van Baren, Benoît J Van den Eynde, Thierry Boon, Pierre G Coulie.   

Abstract

A core challenge in cancer immunotherapy is to understand the basis for efficacious vaccine responses in human patients. In previous work we identified a melanoma patient who displayed a low-level antivaccine cytolytic T-cell (CTL) response in blood with tumor regression after vaccination with melanoma antigens (MAGE). Using a genetic approach including T-cell receptor β (TCRβ) cDNA libraries, we found very few antivaccine CTLs in regressing metastases. However, a far greater number of TCRβ sequences were found with several of these corresponding to CTL clones specific for nonvaccine tumor antigens, suggesting that antigen spreading was occurring in regressing metastases. In this study, we found another TCR belonging to tumor-specific CTL enriched in regressing metastases and detectable in blood only after vaccination. We used the TCRβ sequence to detect and clone the desired T cells from tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes isolated from the patient. This CD8 clone specifically lysed autologous melanoma cells and displayed HLA-A2 restriction. Its target antigen was identified as the mitochondrial enzyme caseinolytic protease. The target antigen gene was mutated in the tumor, resulting in production of a neoantigen. Melanoma cell lysis by the CTL was increased by IFN-γ treatment due to preferential processing of the antigenic peptide by the immunoproteasome. These results argue that tumor rejection effectors in the patient were indeed CTL responding to nonvaccine tumor-specific antigens, further supporting our hypothesis. Among such antigens, the mutated antigen we found is the only antigen against which no T cells could be detected before vaccination. We propose that antigen spreading of an antitumor T-cell response to truly tumor-specific antigens contributes decisively to tumor regression. ©2011 AACR.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21216894     DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-10-2693

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Res        ISSN: 0008-5472            Impact factor:   12.701


  74 in total

1.  Recurrence of melanoma following T cell treatment: continued antigen expression in a tumor that evades T cell recruitment.

Authors:  Trudy Straetemans; Cor Berrevoets; Miriam Coccoris; Elike Treffers-Westerlaken; Rebecca Wijers; David K Cole; Valerie Dardalhon; Andrew K Sewell; Naomi Taylor; Jaap Verweij; Reno Debets
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2014-11-03       Impact factor: 11.454

Review 2.  Database of T cell-defined human tumor antigens: the 2013 update.

Authors:  Nathalie Vigneron; Vincent Stroobant; Benoît J Van den Eynde; Pierre van der Bruggen
Journal:  Cancer Immun       Date:  2013-07-15

Review 3.  Multiple vaccinations: friend or foe.

Authors:  Sarah E Church; Shawn M Jensen; Christopher G Twitty; Keith Bahjat; Hong-Ming Hu; Walter J Urba; Bernard A Fox
Journal:  Cancer J       Date:  2011 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 3.360

4.  Sindbis viral vectors transiently deliver tumor-associated antigens to lymph nodes and elicit diversified antitumor CD8+ T-cell immunity.

Authors:  Tomer Granot; Yoshihide Yamanashi; Daniel Meruelo
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2013-09-12       Impact factor: 11.454

5.  Humoral Immune Response against Nontargeted Tumor Antigens after Treatment with Sipuleucel-T and Its Association with Improved Clinical Outcome.

Authors:  Debraj GuhaThakurta; Nadeem A Sheikh; Li-Qun Fan; Harini Kandadi; T Craig Meagher; Simon J Hall; Philip W Kantoff; Celestia S Higano; Eric J Small; Thomas A Gardner; Kate Bailey; Tuyen Vu; Todd DeVries; James B Whitmore; Mark W Frohlich; James B Trager; Charles G Drake
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2015-02-03       Impact factor: 12.531

6.  Twelve-year survival and immune correlates in dendritic cell-vaccinated melanoma patients.

Authors:  Stefanie Gross; Michael Erdmann; Ina Haendle; Steve Voland; Thomas Berger; Erwin Schultz; Erwin Strasser; Peter Dankerl; Rolf Janka; Stefan Schliep; Lucie Heinzerling; Karl Sotlar; Pierre Coulie; Gerold Schuler; Beatrice Schuler-Thurner
Journal:  JCI Insight       Date:  2017-04-20

7.  Genetic vaccines to potentiate the effective CD103+ dendritic cell-mediated cross-priming of antitumor immunity.

Authors:  Yi Zhang; Guo Chen; Zuqiang Liu; Shenghe Tian; Jiying Zhang; Cara D Carey; Kenneth M Murphy; Walter J Storkus; Louis D Falo; Zhaoyang You
Journal:  J Immunol       Date:  2015-05-13       Impact factor: 5.422

Review 8.  The determinants of tumour immunogenicity.

Authors:  Thomas Blankenstein; Pierre G Coulie; Eli Gilboa; Elizabeth M Jaffee
Journal:  Nat Rev Cancer       Date:  2012-03-01       Impact factor: 60.716

9.  Therapeutic bispecific T-cell engager antibody targeting the intracellular oncoprotein WT1.

Authors:  Tao Dao; Dmitry Pankov; Andrew Scott; Tatyana Korontsvit; Victoriya Zakhaleva; Yiyang Xu; Jingyi Xiang; Su Yan; Manuel Direito de Morais Guerreiro; Nicholas Veomett; Leonid Dubrovsky; Michael Curcio; Ekaterina Doubrovina; Vladimir Ponomarev; Cheng Liu; Richard J O'Reilly; David A Scheinberg
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2015-09-21       Impact factor: 54.908

Review 10.  Cancer immunotherapy targeting neoantigens.

Authors:  Yong-Chen Lu; Paul F Robbins
Journal:  Semin Immunol       Date:  2015-11-30       Impact factor: 11.130

View more

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.