Vaccination with human HER-2/neu (435-443) CTL peptide induces effective antitumor immunity against HER-2/neu-expressing tumor cells in vivo

被引:45
作者
Gritzapis, Angelos D. [1 ]
Mahaira, Louisa G. [1 ]
Perez, Sonia A. [1 ]
Cacoullos, Nike T. [1 ]
Paparnichail, Nhchael [1 ]
Baxevanis, Constantin N. [1 ]
机构
[1] St Savas Canc Hosp, Canc Immunol & Immunotherapy Ctr, Athens 11522, Greece
关键词
D O I
10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-05-4018
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
HER-2/neu is a self-antigen expressed by tumors and nonmalignant epithelial tissues. The possibility of self-tolerance to HER-2/neu-derived epitopes has raised questions concerning their utility in antitumor immunotherapy. Altered HER-2/neu peptide ligands capable of eliciting enhanced immunity to tumor-associated HER-2/neu epitopes may circumvent this problem. The human CTL peptide HER-2/neu (435-443) [hHER-2(9(435))] represents a xenogeneic altered peptide ligand of its mouse homologue, differing by one amino acid residue at position 4. In contrast to mHER-2(9(435)), vaccination of HLA-A*0201 transgenic (HHD) mice with hHER-2(9(435)) significantly increased the frequency of mHER-2(9(435))-specific CTL and also induced strong protective and therapeutic immunity against the transplantable ALC tumor cell line transfected to coexpress HLA-A*0201 and hHER-2/neu or rHER-2/neu. Similar results were also obtained with wild-type C57BL/6 mice inoculated with HER-2/neu transfectants of ALC. Adoptive transfer of CD8(+) CTL from mice immunized with hHER-2(9(435)) efficiently protected naive syngeneic mice inoculated with ALC tumors. In conclusion, our results show that HER-2(9(435)) serves as a tumor rejection molecule. They also propose a novel approach for generating enhanced immunity against a self-HER-2/neu CTL epitope by vaccinating with xenogeneic altered peptide ligands and provide useful insights for the design of improved peptide-based vaccines for the treatment of patients with HER-2/neu-overexpressing tumors.
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页码:5452 / 5460
页数:9
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