Immunization against endogenous retroviral tumor-associated antigens

MH Kershaw, C Hsu, W Mondesire, LL Parker, G Wang… - Cancer research, 2001 - AACR
MH Kershaw, C Hsu, W Mondesire, LL Parker, G Wang, WW Overwijk, R Lapointe, JC Yang…
Cancer research, 2001AACR
Endogenous retroviral gene products have been found in some human tumors, and
therefore, may serve as antigens for immunotherapy approaches. The murine colorectal
carcinoma CT26 and melanoma B16 have recently been found to express the endogenous
retroviral gene products gp70 and p15E, respectively, that can serve as antigens recognized
by T cells. To date, though, there has been no demonstration of tumor treatment using an
endogenous retroviral protein. In this study, we demonstrate that mice immunized with …
Abstract
Endogenous retroviral gene products have been found in some human tumors, and therefore, may serve as antigens for immunotherapy approaches. The murine colorectal carcinoma CT26 and melanoma B16 have recently been found to express the endogenous retroviral gene products gp70 and p15E, respectively, that can serve as antigens recognized by T cells. To date, though, there has been no demonstration of tumor treatment using an endogenous retroviral protein. In this study, we demonstrate that mice immunized with recombinant vaccinia encoding the gp70 H2-Ld-restricted minimal determinant were protected from CT26 tumor challenge. Splenocytes from mice immunized with vaccinia gp70 specifically secreted IFN-γ in response to gp70 peptide-pulsed stimulators. Although this strategy could protect against subsequent tumor challenge, it was ineffective against established tumors. Therefore, to investigate the treatment of established CT26 or B16 lung metastases, mice were treated with cultured dendritic cells (DCs) pulsed with gp70 or p15E peptide. Significant inhibition of established lung metastases required immunization with peptide-pulsed DCs pretreated with CD40 ligand that has been demonstrated to increase the T-cell stimulatory activity of DCs. The ability to immunize against endogenous retroviral tumor antigens may have relevance in the induction of antitumor immunity for some human cancers.
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