Literature DB >> 7906251

Peptide-antibody conjugates for tumour therapy: a MHC-class-II-restricted tetanus toxin peptide coupled to an anti-Ig light chain antibody can induce cytotoxic lysis of a human B-cell lymphoma by specific CD4 T cells.

Z Yu1, F Healy, D Valmori, P Escobar, G Corradin, J P Mach.   

Abstract

Anti-idiotype antibody therapy of B-cell lymphomas, despite numerous promising experimental and clinical studies, has so far met with limited success. Tailor-made monoclonal anti-idiotype antibodies have been injected into a large series of lymphoma patients, with a few impressive complete tumour remissions but a large majority of negative responses. The results presented here suggest that, by coupling to antilymphoma idiotype antibodies a few molecules of the tetanus toxin universal epitope peptide P2 (830-843), one could markedly increase the efficiency of this therapy. We show that after 2-hr incubation with conjugates consisting of the tetanus toxin peptide P2 coupled by an S-S bridge to monoclonal antibodies directed to the lambda light chain of human immunoglobulin, human B-lymphoma cells can be specifically lysed by a CD4 T-lymphocyte clone specific for the P2 peptide. Antibody without peptide did not induce B-cell killing by the CD4 T-lymphocyte clone. The free cysteine-peptide was also able to induce lysis of the B-lymphoma target by the T-lymphocyte clone, but at a molar concentration 500 to 1000 times higher than that of the coupled peptide. Proliferation assays confirmed that the antibody-peptide conjugate was antigenically active at a much lower concentration than the free peptide. They also showed that antibody-peptide conjugates required an intact processing function of the B cell for peptide presentation, which could be selectively inhibited by leupeptin and chloroquine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7906251     DOI: 10.1002/ijc.2910560217

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Cancer        ISSN: 0020-7136            Impact factor:   7.396


  4 in total

1.  Inhibition of Fas-mediated apoptosis by antigen: implications for lymphomagenesis.

Authors:  Elaine J Schattner; Steven M Friedman; Paolo Casali
Journal:  Autoimmunity       Date:  2002-07       Impact factor: 2.815

2.  An anti-CD19 antibody coupled to a tetanus toxin peptide induces efficient Fas ligand (FasL)-mediated cytotoxicity of a transformed human B cell line by specific CD4+ T cells.

Authors:  G Eberl; S Jiang; Z Yu; P Schneider; G Corradin; J P Mach
Journal:  Clin Exp Immunol       Date:  1998-11       Impact factor: 4.330

3.  Inhibition of mouse SP2/0 myeloma cell growth by the B7-H4 protein vaccine.

Authors:  Nan Mu; Nannan Liu; Qiang Hao; Yujin Xu; Jialin Li; Weina Li; Shouzhen Wu; Cun Zhang; Haichuan Su
Journal:  BMB Rep       Date:  2014-07       Impact factor: 4.778

4.  A Highly Conserved Epitope (RNNQIPQDF) of Porcine teschovirus Induced a Group-Specific Antiserum: A Bioinformatics-Predicted Model with Pan-PTV Potential.

Authors:  Tung-Hsuan Tsai; Chia-Yi Chang; Fun-In Wang
Journal:  Viruses       Date:  2020-10-29       Impact factor: 5.048

  4 in total

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