| Literature DB >> 24589652 |
Yusuke Oji1, Naoya Tatsumi1, Mari Fukuda2, Shin-Ichi Nakatsuka3, Sayaka Aoyagi2, Erika Hirata2, Isamu Nanchi2, Fumihiro Fujiki4, Hiroko Nakajima4, Yumiko Yamamoto2, Syohei Shibata2, Michiyo Nakamura2, Kana Hasegawa1, Sayaka Takagi2, Ikuyo Fukuda2, Tomoko Hoshikawa2, Yui Murakami2, Masahide Mori5, Masayoshi Inoue6, Tetsuji Naka7, Takeshi Tomonaga8, Yoshifumi Shimizu9, Masashi Nakagawa10, Junichi Hasegawa11, Riichiro Nezu11, Hidenori Inohara12, Shuichi Izumoto13, Norio Nonomura14, Toshiki Yoshimine13, Meinoshin Okumura6, Eiichi Morii15, Hajime Maeda16, Sumiyuki Nishida17, Naoki Hosen18, Akihiro Tsuboi17, Yoshihiro Oka7, Haruo Sugiyama2.
Abstract
Recent studies have shown that cancer immunotherapy could be a promising therapeutic approach for the treatment of cancer. In the present study, to identify novel tumor-associated antigens (TAAs), the proteins expressed in a panel of cancer cells were serologically screened by immunoblot analysis and the eukaryotic elongation factor 2 (eEF2) was identified as an antigen that was recognized by IgG autoantibody in sera from a group of patients with head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC) or colon cancer. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay showed that serum eEF2 IgG Ab levels were significantly higher in colorectal and gastric cancer patients compared to healthy individuals. Immunohistochemistry experiments showed that the eEF2 protein was overexpressed in the majority of lung, esophageal, pancreatic, breast and prostate cancers, HNSCC, glioblastoma multiforme and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (NHL). Knockdown of eEF2 by short hairpin RNA (shRNA) significantly inhibited the growth in four eEF2-expressing cell lines, PC14 lung cancer, PCI6 pancreatic cancer, HT1080 fibrosarcoma and A172 glioblastoma cells, but not in eEF2-undetectable MCF7 cells. Furthermore, eEF2-derived 9-mer peptides, EF786 (eEF2 786-794 aa) and EF292 (eEF2 292-300 aa), elicited cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from an HLA-A*24:02- and an HLA-A*02:01-positive healthy donor, respectively, in an HLA-A-restricted manner. These results indicated that the eEF2 gene is overexpressed in the majority of several types of cancers and plays an oncogenic role in cancer cell growth. Moreover, the eEF2 gene product is immunogenic and a promising target molecule of cancer immunotherapy for several types of cancers.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24589652 PMCID: PMC4027928 DOI: 10.3892/ijo.2014.2318
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Oncol ISSN: 1019-6439 Impact factor: 5.650
Overexpression of eEF2 in human cancers.
| Cancer | Overexpression of eEF2 (%) |
|---|---|
| Lung cancer | 80.4 (41/51) |
| Lung adenocarcinoma | 71.0 (22/31) |
| Small cell lung cancer | 95.0 (19/20) |
| Esophageal squamous cell carcinoma | 73.3 (11/15) |
| Head and neck squamous cell carcinoma | 52.4 (11/21) |
| Pancreatic cancer | 60.7 (17/28) |
| Breast cancer | 50.0 (4/8) |
| Glioblastoma | 75.0 (12/16) |
| Prostate cancer | 75.0 (3/4) |
| Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma | 94.0 (47/50) |
| Diffuse large B cell lymphoma | 92.5 (37/40) |
| Follicular lymphoma | 100 (10/10) |
Expression of eEF2 protein in human cancers was examined by immunohistochemistry. Immunostaining was evaluated as positive when cancer cells were stained brown in >10% of the cells.
Characteristics of target cells in the killing assay.
| Target cells | HLA-A*24:02 expression | HLA-A*02:01 expression | eEF2 expression |
|---|---|---|---|
| T2 | − | − | Undetectable |
| T2-2402 | + | − | Undetectable |
| T2-0201 | − | + | Undetectable |
| SW480 | + | + | |
| AZ-521 | − | + | |
| MKN28 | − | + | |
| TF-1 | + | + | |
| K562 | − | − | + |
| MCF7 | + | Undetectable |
Cell surface protein expression of HLA-A molecules was confirmed by flow cytometry. Expression of eEF2 protein was analyzed by western blot analysis.
Figure 1.Elevation of serum eEF2 IgG autoantibody levels in cancer patients. (A) Cytoplasmic proteins from PC14, LU99B, K562 and A172 cells were subjected to immunoblot analysis using sera as the first antibodies. Representative results with sera from an HNSCC patient (Pt-1) and a healthy control individual (H-1) are shown. Arrows indicate the protein that is recognized by IgG autoantibody in the sera from the HNSCC patient. (B) Elevation of serum eEF2 IgG autoantibody levels in cancer patients. Assays were performed in duplicate. Colon, colorectal cancer; gastric, gastric cancer; and healthy, healthy individuals. Standard bar represents median value. **p<0.01. eEF2 Ab levels that produces the absorbance at 450 nm equal to that produced by 1 μg/ml of anti-eEF2 H-118 Ab in the ELISA system were defined as 1.0 eEF2-reacting-unit (ERU).
Figure 2.Overexpression of eEF2 in various types of cancers. Representative results of immunohistochemical analysis for eEF2 protein expression in (A and C) lung adenocarcinoma, (B and D) normal lung cells, (E and F) breast cancer, and (G and H) prostate cancer. eEF2 was stained with (A, B, E and G) eEF2-H118 antibody or (C, D, F and H) #SAB4500695 antibody. eEF2 protein was stained brown. Macrophages are non-specifically stained in normal lung tissues.
Figure 3.Knockdown of eEF2 inhibits cancer cell growth. Two shRNA vectors targeting different sequences of eEF2 (shEF-1918 and shEF-2804 targeting 1918–1947 and 2804–2833 nt of eEF2 sequence, respectively) or control shRNA targeting luciferase (shLuc) was transfected into PC14, PCI6, HT1080, A172 and MCF7 cells. (A) Reduction in eEF2 protein expression levels in HT1080 cells. Results of western blot analysis are shown. (B) After 72 h of transfection, the cell numbers were examined. *p<0.05; **p<0.01. Experiments were independently performed three times.
Characteristics of EF2-derived peptides and results of the MHC stabilization assay.
| Peptide | Position (aa) | Sequence | Score | %MFI increase |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HLA-A*24:02-binding peptides | ||||
| EF78 | 78–86 | FYELSENDL | 360 | 40.5 |
| EF786 | 786–794 | AYLPVNESF | 252 | 1552.1 |
| EF701 | 701–709 | RFDVHDVTL | 40 | 297.3 |
| EF412 | 412–420 | AFGRVFSGL | 33.6 | 47.9 |
| CMVpp65 328–336 | QYDPVAALF | 1344.1 | ||
| HLA-A*02:01-binding peptides | ||||
| EF292 | 292–300 | LILDPIFKV | 3290 | 183.3 |
| EF739 | 739–747 | RLMEPIYLV | 2426 | 141.1 |
| EF519 | 519–527 | KLVEGLKRL | 705 | 58.9 |
| EF671 | 671–679 | YLNEIKDSV | 642 | 89.6 |
The primary amino acid sequences of human eEF2 were analyzed for consensus motifs for 9-mer peptides capable of binding to HLA-A*24:02 or 02:01 molecules using ProPred-I software. Percentage MFI increase in MHC stabilization assay was calculated as follows: percentage MFI increase = (MFI with the given peptide - MFI without peptide)/(MFI without peptide) × 100.
Figure 4.Generation of eEF2-specific CTLs. (A, left panel) Specific lysis of EF786 peptide-pulsed T2-2402 cells by EF786-specific, HLA-A*24:02-restricted CTLs. (A, right panel) Specific lysis of eEF2-expressing, HLA-A*24:02-positive SW480 by EF786-specific, HLA-A*24:02-restricted CTLs. AZ-521 and MKN28 are eEF2-expressing, but HLA-A*24:02-negative. (B, left panel) Specific lysis of EF292 peptide-pulsed T2-0201 cells by EF292-specific, HLA-A*02:01-restricted CTLs. (B, right panel) Specific lysis of eEF2-expressing, HLA-A*02:01-positive TF-1 cells by EF292-specific, HLA-A*02:01-restricted CTLs. K562 is eEF2-expressing and HLA-A*02:01-negative, and MCF7 is eEF2-undetectable and HLA-A*02:01-positive. E/T, effector/target ratio. CTL cytotoxic assays were performed in triplicate.