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Differential capacity of chaperone-rich lysates in cross-presenting human endogenous and exogenous melanoma differentiation antigens.

Authors :
Bleifuss, Elke
Bendz, Henriette
Sirch, Birgit
Thompson, Sylvia
Brandl, Anna
Milani, Valeria
Graner, Michael W.
Drexler, Ingo
Kuppner, Maria
Katsanis, Emmanuel
Noessner, Elfriede
Issels, Rolf-Dieter
Source :
International Journal of Hyperthermia; Dec2008, Vol. 24 Issue 8, p623-637, 15p, 1 Diagram, 1 Chart, 4 Graphs
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

The goal of immune-based tumor therapies is the activation of immune cells reactive against a broad spectrum of tumor-expressed antigens. Vaccines based on chaperone proteins appear promising as these proteins naturally exist as complexes with various protein fragments including those derived from tumor-associated antigens. Multi-chaperone systems are expected to have highest polyvalency as different chaperones can carry distinct sets of antigenic fragments. A free-solution isoelectric focusing (FS-IEF) technique was established to generate chaperone-rich cell lysates (CRCL). Results from murine systems support the contention that CRCL induce superior anti-tumor responses than single chaperone vaccines. We established an in vitro model for human melanoma to evaluate the capacity of CRCL to transfer endogenously expressed tumor antigens to the cross-presentation pathway of dendritic cells (DC) for antigen-specific T cell stimulation. CRCL prepared from human melanoma lines contained the four major chaperone proteins Hsp/Hsc70, Hsp90, Grp94/gp96 and calreticulin. The chaperones within the melanoma cell-derived CRCL were functionally active in that they enhanced cross-presentation of exogenous peptides mixed into the CRCL preparation. Superior activity was observed for Hsp70-rich CRCL obtained from heat-stressed melanoma cells. Despite the presence of active chaperones, melanoma cell-derived CRCL failed to transfer endogenously expressed melanoma-associated antigens to DC for cross-presentation and cytotoxic T cell (CTL) recognition, even after increasing intracellular protein levels of tumor antigen or chaperones. These findings reveal limitations of the CRCL approach regarding cross-presentation of endogenously expressed melanoma-associated antigens. Yet, CRCL may be utilized as vehicles to enhance the delivery of exogenous antigens for DC-mediated cross-presentation and T cell stimulation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02656736
Volume :
24
Issue :
8
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
International Journal of Hyperthermia
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
35603477
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/02656730802213384