Role of SEREX-defined immunogenic wild-type cellular molecules in the development of tumor-specific immunity

  1. Hiroyoshi Nishikawa*,
  2. Koji Tanida,
  3. Hiroaki Ikeda*,,
  4. Miho Sakakura*,
  5. Yoshihiro Miyahara*,
  6. Takumi Aota*,
  7. Katsumi Mukai*,
  8. Masato Watanabe*,
  9. Kagemasa Kuribayashi§,
  10. Lloyd J. Old, and
  11. Hiroshi Shiku*,
  1. *Second Department of Internal Medicine, Departments of Gynecology and Obstetrics and §Bioregulation, Mie University School of Medicine, Tsu, Mie 514-8507, Japan; Department of Pathology and Immunology, Center for Immunology, Washington University School of Medicine, 660 South Euclid Avenue, St. Louis, MO 63110; and Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Memorial Sloan–Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY 10021
  1. Contributed by Lloyd J. Old

Abstract

Recognition of altered self-antigens in tumor cells by lymphocytes forms the basis for antitumor immune responses. The effector cells in most experimental tumor systems are CD8+ T cells that recognize MHC class I binding peptides derived from molecules with altered expression in tumor cells. Although the need for CD4+ helper T cells in regulating CD8+ T cells has been documented, their target epitopes and functional impact in antitumor responses remain unclear. We examined whether broadly expressed wild-type molecules in murine tumor cells eliciting humoral immunity contributed to the generation of CD8+ T cells and protective antitumor immune responses to unrelated tumor-specific antigens [mutated ERK2 (mERK2) and c-erbB2/HER/neu (HER2)]. The immunogenic wild-type molecules, presumably dependent on recognition by CD4+ helper T cells, were defined by serological analysis of recombinant cDNA expression libraries (SEREX) using tumor-derived λ phage libraries screened with IgG antibodies of hosts bearing transplanted 3-methylchoranthrene-induced tumors. Coimmunization of mice with plasmids encoding SEREX-defined murine wild-type molecules and mERK2 or HER2 led to a profound increase in CD8+ T cells specific for mERK2 or HER2 peptides. This heightened response depended on CD4+ T cells and copresentation of SEREX-defined molecules and CD8+ T cell epitopes. In tumor protection assays, immunization with SEREX-defined wild-type molecules and mERK2 resulted in an inhibition of pulmonary metastasis, which was not achieved by immunization with mERK2 alone.

Footnotes

  • To whom reprint requests should be addressed at: Second Department of Internal Medicine, Mie University School of Medicine, 2–174 Edobashi, Tsu, Mie, 514-8507, Japan. E-mail: shiku{at}clin.medic.mie-u.ac.jp.

  • Abbreviations:
    SEREX,
    serological analysis of recombinant cDNA expression libraries;
    APC,
    antigen-presenting cell;
    mERK2,
    mutated ERK2;
    HER2,
    c-erbB2/HER2/neu
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