Tumor-associated antigen profiling in breast and ovarian cancer: mRNA, protein or T cell recognition?
- 1 July 2003
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Zeitschrift für Krebsforschung und Klinische Onkologie
- Vol. 129 (7) , 397-409
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s00432-003-0445-7
Abstract
The absence of tumor-associated antigens (TAA) which might elicit an immune response is one reason for the disappointing results of therapeutical vaccines in cancer patients. Moreover, impaired expression of MHC class-I and components involved in antigen processing, such as TAP-1, -2, LMP-2, -7, and MECL-1, may lead to tumor escape from immune recognition. Expression profiling of TAA is one approach towards the design of well-defined and individualized anti-tumor vaccines. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) is the method of choice to characterize immunologically relevant properties of individual tumors. However, the application of qRT-PCR as a surrogate parameter for the expression of TAAs depends upon the assumption that the level of an mRNA species correlates with the cellular level of the protein it encodes. Therefore, we additionally analyzed TAA expression by immunofluorescence and T cell recognition. In the present study we were unable to confirm that impaired TAP-1 or -2 (transporter associated with antigen processing) expression characterized at the mRNA level is an appropriate surrogate parameter for down-regulated MHC class-I expression in breast cancer. In addition, we analyzed the expression pattern of TAAs in breast and ovarian cancer cell lines. Besides the well-known over-expression of HER-2/neu, CEA, and MUC-1, multiple antigens of the MAGE-family were frequently co-expressed. We investigated whether detection of TAAs by qRT-PCR correlates with monoclonal antibody staining, and which method could predict T cell recognition. We demonstrated a correlation between tumor cell lysis by HLA-A*0201-restricted, MUC-1-specific CTL and threshold levels of MUC-1-specific mRNA. MUC-1 is an example that TAA profiling by RT-PCR and flow cytometry can fail to correlate with each other and are of limited value in the prediction of T cell recognition.Keywords
This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
- Identification of tumour-associated t-cell epitopes for vaccine developmentNature Reviews Cancer, 2002
- From cancer genomics to cancer immunotherapy: toward second-generation tumor antigensTrends in Immunology, 2001
- In situ expression of transforming growth factor ?? is associated with melanoma progression and correlates with Ki67, HLA-DR and ?? 3 integrin expressionMelanoma Research, 1997
- Expression of MAGE‐1, MAGE‐2, MAGE‐3/‐6 and MAGE‐4A/‐4B genes in ovarian tumorsInternational Journal of Cancer, 1995
- Expression of the mage gene family in primary and metastatic human breast cancer: Implications for tumor antigen‐specific immunotherapyInternational Journal of Cancer, 1995
- Natural history of HLA expression during tumour developmentImmunology Today, 1993
- Tumor Rejection After Direct Costimulation of CD8 + T Cells by B7-Transfected Melanoma CellsScience, 1993
- Expression of HLA-D subloci DR and DQ by breast carcinomas is correlated with distinct parameters of favourable prognosisEuropean Journal of Cancer and Clinical Oncology, 1991
- A core protein epitope of the polymorphic epithelial mucin detected by the monoclonal antibody SM‐3 is selectively exposed in a range of primary carcinomasInternational Journal of Cancer, 1989
- Studies of the HER-2/ neu Proto-Oncogene in Human Breast and Ovarian CancerScience, 1989