1. Thymic expression of a T-cell receptor targeting a tumor-associated antigen coexpressed in the thymus induces T-ALL
- Author
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Sandra Burkett, Haven R. Garber, Masahiro Onozawa, Leigh Samsel, Xiaolin Wu, J. Philip McCoy, Ziyao Wang, Peter D. Aplan, Crystal L. Mackall, and Yongzhi Cui
- Subjects
Survivin ,Receptor expression ,Blotting, Western ,Immunology ,Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Mice, Transgenic ,chemical and pharmacologic phenomena ,Thymus Gland ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Precursor T-Cell Lymphoblastic Leukemia-Lymphoma ,Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Major histocompatibility complex ,Biochemistry ,Inhibitor of Apoptosis Proteins ,Mice ,Immune system ,Antigen ,Antigens, Neoplasm ,T-Lymphocyte Subsets ,Tumor Cells, Cultured ,Animals ,RNA, Messenger ,Receptor ,Homeodomain Proteins ,Lymphoid Neoplasia ,biology ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,T-cell receptor ,hemic and immune systems ,Cell Biology ,Hematology ,Flow Cytometry ,Molecular biology ,Peptide Fragments ,Chimeric antigen receptor ,Neoplasm Proteins ,Cell biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Repressor Proteins ,Cell Transformation, Neoplastic ,biology.protein ,Signal transduction ,Cell Adhesion Molecules ,Signal Transduction - Abstract
T-cell receptors (TCRs) and chimeric antigen receptors recognizing tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) can now be engineered to be expressed on a wide array of immune effectors. Engineered receptors targeting TAAs have most commonly been expressed on mature T cells, however, some have postulated that receptor expression on immune progenitors could yield T cells with enhanced potency. We generated mice (survivin-TCR-transgenic [Sur-TCR-Tg]) expressing a TCR recognizing the immunodominant epitope (Sur20-28) of murine survivin during early stages of thymopoiesis. Spontaneous T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (T-ALL) occurred in 100% of Sur-TCR-Tg mice derived from 3 separate founders. The leukemias expressed the Sur-TCR and signaled in response to the Sur20-28 peptide. In preleukemic mice, we observed increased cycling of double-negative thymocytes expressing the Sur-TCR and increased nuclear translocation of nuclear factor of activated T cells, consistent with TCR signaling induced by survivin expression in the murine thymus. β2M(-/-) Sur-TCR-Tg mice, which cannot effectively present survivin peptides on class I major histocompatibility complex, had significantly diminished rates of leukemia. We conclude that TCR signaling during the early stages of thymopoiesis mediates an oncogenic signal, and therefore expression of signaling receptors on developing thymocytes with specificity for TAAs expressed in the thymus could pose a risk for neoplasia, independent of insertional mutagenesis.
- Published
- 2015
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