Correlation between tumor regression and T cell responses in melanoma patients vaccinated with a MAGE antigen
- 5 October 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 101 (suppl_2) , 14631-14638
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0405743101
Abstract
The cancer-germline gene MAGE-3 codes for tumor-specific antigens recognized on many tumors by T lymphocytes. A MAGE-3 antigen presented by HLA-A1 has been used in several vaccination trials on metastatic melanoma patients. Only a small minority of patients have shown evidence of tumor regression. Attempts to correlate the tumor rejections with the cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response against the vaccine have been hampered by the low level of these responses. In noncancerous individuals, the frequency of the T cell precursors against antigen MAGE-3.A1 is ≈4 × 10 -7 CD8 T cells. The diversity of the T cell receptor repertoire of these anti-MAGE-3.A1 precursors was analyzed in one individual. The results indicate that it is very likely that the repertoire comprises >100 clonotypes. On this basis, it is possible to use not only the frequency of CTL precursors in the blood but also the presence of dominant clonotypes to ascertain in patients the existence of anti-MAGE-3.A1 responses as low as 10 -6 of CD8. With this approach, we observed a correlation between tumor regression and anti-MAGE-3.A1 CTL responses in patients vaccinated with a recombinant virus encoding the antigen and also in patients vaccinated with peptide-pulsed dendritic cells. In contrast, for patients showing tumor regression after vaccination with peptide alone, CTL responses were almost never observed. It is possible that even those CTL responses that are below our present detection level can trigger a sequence of events that leads to tumor regression.Keywords
This publication has 17 references indexed in Scilit:
- Polyclonal CTL Responses Observed in Melanoma Patients Vaccinated with Dendritic Cells Pulsed with a MAGE-3.A1 PeptideThe Journal of Immunology, 2003
- Cytolytic T‐cell responses of cancer patients vaccinated with a MAGE antigenImmunological Reviews, 2002
- Degeneracy of Antigen Recognition as the Molecular Basis for the High Frequency of Naive A2/Melan-A Peptide Multimer+ CD8+ T Cells in HumansThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2002
- Thymic Selection Generates a Large T Cell Pool Recognizing a Self-Peptide in HumansThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2002
- A monoclonal cytolytic T-lymphocyte response observed in a melanoma patient vaccinated with a tumor-specific antigenic peptide encoded by geneMAGE-3Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2001
- Naturally occurring human lymphocyte antigen-A2 restricted CD8+ T-cell response to the cancer testis antigen NY-ESO-1 in melanoma patients.2000
- A MAGE-A1 peptide presented to cytolytic T lymphocytes by both HLA-B35 and HLA-A1 moleculesTissue Antigens, 2000
- Diversity of Human αβ T Cell ReceptorsScience, 2000
- A Direct Estimate of the Human αβ T Cell Receptor DiversityScience, 1999
- Tumor regressions observed in patients with metastatic melanoma treated with an antigenic peptide encoded by geneMAGE-3 and presented by HLA-A1International Journal of Cancer, 1999