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Immunotherapeutic
Targeting of Shared Melanoma-Associated Antigens in a Murine Glioma Model
Prins RM, Odesa SK, Liau
LM
Department
of Surgery/Neurosurgery, Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular
Genetics, Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center, and. Brain Research Institute,
David Geffen School of Medicine at University of California Los Angeles, Los
Angeles, California.
Immune-based treatments for central nervous system gliomas have traditionally
lagged behind those of more immunogenic tumors such as melanoma.
The relative paucity of defined glioma-associated antigens that can be targeted
by the immune system may partially account for this situation.
Antigens present on melanomas have been extensively characterized, both in
humans and in murine preclinical models.
Melanocytes and astrocytes are both derived embryologically from the neural
ectoderm.
Their neoplastic counterparts, malignant melanomas and gliomas, have been shown
in humans to share common antigens at the RNA level.
However, little is known concerning whether gliomas can be targeted by
immune-based strategies that prime T cells to epitopes from melanoma-associated
antigens (MAAs).
In this study, we provide evidence that two common murine glioma cell lines
(GL26 and GL261) express the melanoma antigens gp100 and tyrosinase-related
protein 2 (TRP-2).
To understand the immunogenicity of murine gliomas to CD8(+) T cells, we
examined the ability of a MAA-specific CTL cell line to lyse the glioma cells,
as well as the in vivo expansion of MAA-specific CD8(+) T cells in animals
harboring gliomas.
Both glioma cell lines were lysed by a human gp100-specific CTL cell line in
vitro.
Mice harboring s.c. GL26 gliomas possessed TRP-2-specific CD8(+) T cells,
providing further evidence that these gliomas express the protein products in
the context of MHC class I.
Furthermore, MAA peptide-pulsed dendritic cells could prime T cells that
specifically recognize GL26 glioma cells in vitro.
Lastly, mice that were prevaccinated with human gp100 and TRP-2 peptide-pulsed
dendritic cells had significantly extended survival when challenged with tumor
cells in the brain, resulting in >50% long-term survival.
These results suggest that shared MAAs on gliomas can be targeted
immunotherapeutically, pointing the way to a new potential treatment option for
patients with malignant gliomas.
PMID: 14679014 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=14679014&dopt=Abstract
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