| Literature DB >> 9609139 |
G F Hofbauer1, J Kamarashev, R Geertsen, R Böni, R Dummer.
Abstract
Monoclonal antibody T311 specifically detects tyrosinase protein expression. Tyrosinase-derived peptides are recognized by CD8+ T-cells and applied in immunotherapy. We examined formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded tissue of 50 melanoma (primary n=31, metastatic n=19) and 41 control cases (junctional, dermal, compound, Spitz, Reed, balloon-cell nevi) by immunochemistry using the alkaline phosphatase-anti-alkaline phosphatase method after antigen retrieval. Staining with mAb T311 showed a sensitivity of 94% for melanoma with a very high specificity for melanocytic cells. Immunopositivity (94% of melanomas overall) correlated inversely with clinical stage: clinical stage I and stage II showed 100%, stage III and stage IV 86% immunoreactivity each. Staining changed from an exclusively homogeneous pattern in early stages to a more heterogeneous pattern in later stages. Melanocytic control tissue like nevi of different subtypes all showed weak to moderate, homogeneous immunoreactivity with polarity towards the epidermis. RT-PCR ELISA analysis of short-term melanoma cell cultures displayed mRNA expression in only half of the originally immunopositive tumors only, suggesting rapid mRNA expression loss in culture. mAb T311 allows detection of melanoma-associated tyrosinase protein expression and thus profiling of melanomas using routine archival tissue suited for immunotherapy approaches involving tyrosinase derived epitopes.Entities:
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Year: 1998 PMID: 9609139 DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0560.1998.tb01720.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cutan Pathol ISSN: 0303-6987 Impact factor: 1.587