| Literature DB >> 30530751 |
Tatjana Bilich1,2, Annika Nelde1,2, Leon Bichmann1,3, Malte Roerden2, Helmut R Salih2,4, Daniel J Kowalewski1,5, Heiko Schuster1,5, Chih-Chiang Tsou6, Ana Marcu1, Marian C Neidert7, Maren Lübke1, Jonas Rieth1, Mirle Schemionek8, Tim H Brümmendorf8, Vladan Vucinic9, Dietger Niederwieser9, Jens Bauer1,2, Melanie Märklin4, Janet K Peper1, Reinhild Klein2, Oliver Kohlbacher3,10,11,12, Lothar Kanz2, Hans-Georg Rammensee1,13, Stefan Stevanović1,13, Juliane S Walz2.
Abstract
Antileukemia immunity plays an important role in disease control and maintenance of tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI)-free remission in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML). Thus, antigen-specific immunotherapy holds promise for strengthening immune control in CML but requires the identification of CML-associated targets. In this study, we used a mass spectrometry-based approach to identify naturally presented HLA class I- and class II-restricted peptides in primary CML samples. Comparative HLA ligandome profiling using a comprehensive dataset of different hematological benign specimens and samples from CML patients in deep molecular remission delineated a panel of novel frequently presented CML-exclusive peptides. These nonmutated target antigens are of particular relevance because our extensive data-mining approach suggests the absence of naturally presented BCR-ABL- and ABL-BCR-derived HLA-restricted peptides and the lack of frequent tumor-exclusive presentation of known cancer/testis and leukemia-associated antigens. Functional characterization revealed spontaneous T-cell responses against the newly identified CML-associated peptides in CML patient samples and their ability to induce multifunctional and cytotoxic antigen-specific T cells de novo in samples from healthy volunteers and CML patients. Thus, these antigens are prime candidates for T-cell-based immunotherapeutic approaches that may prolong TKI-free survival and even mediate cure of CML patients.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30530751 DOI: 10.1182/blood-2018-07-866830
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113