 |
|
 |
 |
Cancer
Immunity, Vol. 2, p. 5 (28 June 2002) Submitted:
11 June 2002. Accepted: 11 June 2002.
Contributed by: A Knuth
Identification of tumor-restricted antigens NY-BR-1, SCP-1, and a new cancer/testis-like antigen NW-BR-3 by serological screening of a testicular library with breast cancer serum
Dirk Jäger1, Marc Unkelbach1,
Claudia Frei1, Florian Bert1,
Matthew J. Scanlan2, Elke Jäger1,
Lloyd J. Old2, Yao-Tseng Chen2,
and Alexander Knuth1
1II. Medizinische Klinik, Hämatologie-Onkologie, Krankenhaus Nordwest, Frankfurt
2Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, New York Branch at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, New York
Keywords:
human, breast cancer, SEREX, tumor antigens, RNA sequence analysis, mRNA, tissue distribution
|
|
|
 |
 |
 |
Abstract
Serological analysis of recombinant cDNA expression libraries (SEREX) has led to the identification of several categories of new tumor antigens. We analyzed a testicular cDNA expression library with serum obtained from a breast cancer patient and isolated 13 genes designated NW-BR-1 through NW-BR-13. Of these, 3 showed tumor-restricted expression (NW-BR-1, -2 and -3), the others being expressed ubiquitously. NW-BR-3, representing 9 of 24 primary clones, showed tissue-restricted mRNA expression, being expressed in normal testis but not in 15 other normal tissues tested by Northern blotting. RT-PCR analysis showed strong NW-BR-3 expression in normal testis, weak expression in brain, kidney, trachea, uterus and normal prostate, and was negative in liver, heart, lung, colon, small intestine, bone marrow, breast, thymus, muscle, spleen, and stomach. NW-BR-3 mRNA expression was found in different tumor tissues and tumor cell lines by RT-PCR, thus showing a `cancer/testis´ (CT)-like mRNA expression pattern. NW-BR-3 shares 71% nucleotide and amino acid homology to a mouse gene cloned from mouse testicular tissue. Based on the mRNA expression pattern, NW-BR-3 represents a new candidate target gene for cancer immunotherapy. NW-BR-1 and NW-BR-2 also showed tumor-restricted mRNA expression. NW-BR-1 is a partial clone of the breast differentiation antigen NY-BR-1 previously identified by SEREX. NY-BR-1 is expressed in normal breast, testis and 80% of breast cancers. NW-BR-2 is identical to the CT antigen SCP-1, initially isolated by SEREX analysis of renal cancer. This study provides further evidence that SEREX is a powerful tool to identify new tumor antigens potentially relevant for immunotherapy approaches.

|