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Naturally processed class II epitope from the tumor antigen MUC1 primes human CD4+ T cells.
84
Citations
8
References
1998
Year
T-regulatory CellImmunologyImmunoeditingPathologyAntigen ProcessingCd4 T Cell ResponsesTumor Antigen Muc1ImmunotherapyHealthy DonorsTumor BiologyTumor ImmunitySynthetic Muc1 PeptideAutoimmunityT Cell ImmunityCell BiologyCancer ImmunosurveillanceMuc1 Protein CoreClass Ii EpitopeCellular Immune ResponseMedicine
Epithelial cell mucin MUC1 is expressed on adenocarcinomas in an underglycosylated form that serves as a tumor antigen in breast, pancreatic, ovarian, and other tumors. Two predominant MUC1-specific immune responses are found in patients: CD8+ CTLs, which recognize tandemly repeated epitopes on the MUC1 protein core, and IgM antibodies. There have been no reports to date of MUC1-specific CD4+ T-helper cells in cancer patients. We show here that MUC1-specific CD4+ T cells are neither deleted nor tolerized and that CD4+ T cell responses can be generated when an appropriate soluble form of MUC1 is used. Naive CD4+ T cells from healthy donors were primed in vitro to a synthetic MUC1 peptide of 100 amino acids, representing five unglycosylated tandem repeats, presented by dendritic cells. They produced IFN-gamma and had moderate cytolytic activity. We identified one core peptide sequence, PGSTAPPAHGVT, that elicits this response when it is presented by HLA-DR3.
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