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Common Ewing sarcoma-associated antigens fail to induce natural T cell responses in both patients and healthy individuals.

Authors :
Altvater B
Kailayangiri S
Theimann N
Ahlmann M
Farwick N
Chen C
Pscherer S
Neumann I
Mrachatz G
Hansmeier A
Hardes J
Gosheger G
Juergens H
Rossig C
Source :
Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII [Cancer Immunol Immunother] 2014 Oct; Vol. 63 (10), pp. 1047-60. Date of Electronic Publication: 2014 Jun 28.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Disseminated or relapsed Ewing sarcoma (EwS) has remained fatal in the majority of patients. A promising approach to preventing relapse after conventional therapy is to establish tumor antigen-specific immune control. Efficient and specific T cell memory against the tumor depends on the expansion of rare T cells with native specificity against target antigens overexpressed by the tumor. Candidate antigens in EwS include six-transmembrane epithelial antigen of the prostate-1 (STEAP1), and the human cancer/testis antigens X-antigen family member 1 (XAGE1) and preferentially expressed antigen in melanoma (PRAME). Here, we screened normal donors and EwS patients for the presence of circulating T cells reactive with overlapping peptide libraries of these antigens by IFN-γ Elispot analysis. The majority of 22 healthy donors lacked detectable memory T cell responses against STEAP1, XAGE1 and PRAME. Moreover, ex vivo detection of T cells specific for these antigens in both blood and bone marrow were limited to a minority of EwS patients and required nonspecific T cell prestimulation. Cytotoxic T cells specific for the tumor-associated antigens were efficiently and reliably generated by in vitro priming using professional antigen-presenting cells and optimized cytokine stimulation; however, these T cells failed to interact with native antigen processed by target cells and with EwS cells expressing the antigen. We conclude that EwS-associated antigens fail to induce efficient T cell receptor (TCR)-mediated antitumor immune responses even under optimized conditions. Strategies based on TCR engineering could provide a more effective means to manipulating T cell immunity toward targeted elimination of tumor cells.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1432-0851
Volume :
63
Issue :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Cancer immunology, immunotherapy : CII
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
24973179
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00262-014-1574-3