Publication | Open Access
An analogue peptide from the Cancer/Testis antigen PASD1 induces CD8+ T cell responses against naturally processed peptide.
18
Citations
41
References
2013
Year
ImmunologyImmunoeditingImmunodominanceAntigen ProcessingPeptide SciencePeptide TherapeuticsCd4 T Cell ResponsesImmunotherapeuticsImmune SystemImmunotherapyCancer/testis Antigen Pasd1Synthetic ImmunologyTumor ImmunologyAnalogue PeptideTumor ImmunityCell SignalingAltered Pasd1 EpitopeImmunoengineeringTherapeutic VaccineImmune SurveillanceT Cell ImmunityAnchor-modified Analogue PeptidesCell BiologyCancer ImmunosurveillanceCellular Immune ResponseMedicineTestis Library
We have previously identified the novel Cancer/Testis antigen PASD1 by immunoscreening a testis library with pooled acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patient sera. To develop a cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL)-inducing vaccine, we have now investigated the carboxy-terminal region, known to contain serological determinants, for MHC class I (HLA-A⋆0201)-binding peptides. Algorithm-selected natural peptides failed to show detectable HLA-A⋆0201 binding in T2 assays. However, anchor-modified analogue peptides showed enhanced binding, with decreased off-rates. Analogue peptide-loaded antigen-presenting cells (APCs) induced IFN-γ production by T cells from normal donors and patients. In addition, peptide-specific T cells could be expanded from cancer patients by stimulation with the PASD1 analogue peptide Pa14. For clinical application, a DNA fusion gene vaccine encoding Pa14 was designed and tested in "humanized" mice. Splenocytes from vaccinated mice showed in vitro cytotoxicity against tumour cells, either exogenously loaded with the corresponding wild-type peptide (Pw8) or expressing endogenously processed PASD1 protein. We show for the first time that a DNA vaccine encoding an altered PASD1 epitope can induce CTLs to target the natural peptide expressed by human tumour cells.
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