| Literature DB >> 22304896 |
Chen-Si Lin1, Shih-Han Kao, Yu-Cheng Chen, Chi-Han Li, Yuan-Ting Hsieh, Shang-Chih Yang, Chang-Jer Wu, Ru-Ping Lee, Kuang-Wen Liao.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is widely understood that tumor cells express tumor-associated antigens (TAAs), of which many are usually in low immunogenicity; for example, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) is specifically expressed on human colon cancer cells and is viewed as a low-immunogenic TAA. How to activate host immunity against specific TAAs and to suppress tumor growth therefore becomes important in cancer therapy development.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22304896 PMCID: PMC3298716 DOI: 10.1186/1480-9222-14-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Proced Online ISSN: 1480-9222 Impact factor: 3.244
Figure 1Flanking nucleotide sequences of the CEA and SARS epitopes. (a) 132 bps (nucleotides 12804~10935) of the CEA sequence (NCBI accession No. Z21818) and (b) 177 bps of the SARS sequence (NCBI accession No. AB263618) were used as the starting materials to generate highly-immunogenic mutations. The grey area indicates the epitope used for affinity prediction.
Comparison of the CEA and CEA-SARS epitopes with other known epitopes that have been proven to elicit immunity in BALB/c mice.
| Gene | Primer | Sequence (5'→3') | Tm (°C) |
|---|---|---|---|
| P1 | TACggAATTCATggAgTCTCCCTCggCCCCTCCCCACAgATggTgCATCC | 71.6 | |
| P2 | CCTggCAgAggCTCCTgCTCACAggTgAAgggAggACAAC | 71.5 | |
| P3 | CTgggAgAgggTgggAGggAgggAgCTggggTCTCCTgggT | 75.1 | |
| P4 | CTCCTCCCACCCTCTCCCAggTTgTCCTCCCTTCACCTgT | 71.8 | |
| P5 | gAgCAggAgCCTCTgCCAggggATgCACCATCTgTggggA | 73.7 | |
| P6 | gCTATC TAgATCACAgCCCTgTCCTACCCAggAgACCCCAgCTCC | 71.1 | |
| P7 | gCTATCTAgACAgCCCTgTCCTACCCAggAgACCCCAgCTCC | 71.0 | |
| P1 | TACgTCTAgAAAAgTCgAggCggAggTACAAATTgACAggTTAATTACA | 65.7 | |
| P2 | ggCAgACTTCAAAgCCTTCAAACCTATgTAACACAACAAC | 63.9 | |
| P3 | TAATCAggATTAAATggCCTTggTATgTTTggCTCggCTT | 65.3 | |
| P4 | CATTgCTggACTAATTgCCATCgTCATggTTACAATCTTg | 63.7 | |
| P5 | gCTAAAgCTTTTAAgTCATgCAACAAAgCAAgATTgTAACCATgACgA | 64.1 | |
| P6 | TggCAATAgTCCAgCAATgAAgCCgAgCCAAACATACCA | 67.7 | |
| P7 | AggCCATTTAATCCTgATTAgTTgTTgTgTTACATggTT | 61.7 | |
| P8 | TgAAggCTTTgAAgTCTgCCTgTAATTAACCTGgTCAATTT | 63.2 | |
PCR primers used to synthesize CEA and SARS peptides.
| H2-Kd nonamer | Amino acid | Score | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| S | 16 | NCBI accession No. Z21218 | |
| W | 21 | NCBI accession No. AB263618 | |
| G | 24 | Nakamura et al., 2003 | |
| K | 27 | Bouwer et al., 1996 | |
| H | 27 | Gambotto et al., 2001 |
Predicted by the SYFPEITHI algorithm.
Figure 2Serum cytokine profiles of BALB/c mice orally-vaccinated with CEA-SARS-derived epitopes. Sera samples were collected for in vivo cytokine detection, including (a) TNF-α and (b) IL-10. (*, p < 0.05 in comparison with the control and the pCEA group).
Figure 3. Five BALB/c mice in each treatment group were inoculated with CT26/CEA cells 21 days after vaccination with pCEA- and pCEA-SARS-transformed S. typhimurium and the tumor volume in the mice was observed. (*, p < 0.05 in comparison with the control and the pCEA group).
Figure 4Therapeutic effect of CEA-SARS-derived epitopes on tumor establishment. BALB/c mice were inoculated with CT26/CEA cells on day 0. Four days later, the mice were fed with pCEA- and pCEA-SARS-transformed S. typhimurium once per week (5 mice/group), and the subsequent tumor volume in the mice was observed. (*, p < 0.05 in comparison with the control and the pCEA group).