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Cancer
Immunity, Vol. 2, p. 3 (16 April 2002) Submitted: 12 June 2001. Resubmitted: 8 February 2002. Accepted: 11 March 2002.
Communicated by: JC Cerottini
In vitro generated cytolytic T lymphocytes reactive against head and neck cancer recognize multiple epitopes presented by HLA-A2, including peptides derived from the p53 and MDM-2 proteins
Tadao Asai, Walter J. Storkus, Jan Mueller-Berghaus,
William Knapp, Albert B. DeLeo, Kazuaki Chikamatsu,
and Theresa L. Whiteside
University of Pittsburgh Cancer Institute, Departments of Pathology and Surgery, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA 15213
Keywords:
human, head and neck cancer, cytotoxic T Lymphocytes, HLA-A2, peptides
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Abstract
In previous studies, we were successful in generating HLA-A2-restricted CD8+ CTLs reactive with head and neck carcinomas (HNCs) in 4/10 cases using traditional mixed lymphocyte tumor cultures (MLTCs) employing a semi-allogeneic HLA-A2+ HNC cell line, PCI-13, as the stimulator of normal HLA-A2+ donor T lymphocytes. However, these T cell lines contained only 1-1.5% HLA-A2-restricted, tumor-reactive CD8+ CTLs, as assessed by both limiting dilution and IFN-gamma ELISPOT assays. In order to increase the success rate in generating such HNC-reactive CTL lines, we modified the procedure to allow for T cell crosspriming by autologous DCs pulsed with PCI-13 lysates. In all three attempts, HLA-A2-restricted effector T cell lines were obtained that contained PCI-13-reactive CD8+ T cells at frequencies as high as 1 in 6. These cultured bulk lines recognized at least five predominant HLA-A2-restricted epitopes based on ELISPOT fingerprinting of HPLC-fractionated, naturally presented PCI-13-derived peptides. Two of these epitopes appear to be derived from the p53 and MDM-2 proteins overexpressed by the PCI-13 cell line. Interestingly, the synthetic wild type sequence p53264-272 and MDM-253-61 peptides were able to drive in vitro generation of tumor-specific CTLs from the PBMCs of normal HLA-A2+ donors. However, this MDM-2 peptide was not able to elicit responses from HLA-A2+ patients with HNC in short-term in vitro cultures. Overall, these data suggest that tumor lysate-loaded DCs elicit a broad repertoire of CTL responses, some of which are directed against peptides derived from cell cycle regulatory proteins that may prove to be of clinical significance in the therapy of HNC.

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