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Valérie Dutoit, Robert N. Taub, Kyriakos P. Papadopoulos, Susan Talbot, Mary-Louise Keohan, Michelle Brehm, Sacha Gnjatic, Paul E. Harris, Brygida Bisikirska, Philippe Guillaume, Jean-Charles Cerottini, Charles S. Hesdorffer, Lloyd J. Old, Danila Valmori
Published in Volume 110, Issue 12
J Clin Invest. 2002; 110(12):1813–1822 doi:10.1172/JCI16428
Abstract | Full text | PDF
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Figure 6

Resistance of NY-ESO-1 peptides in the 157-167 region to degradation in human serum. NY-ESO-1 peptides 9-157, 9-157 substituted analogue C165A, 9-159, 11-157, or Melan-A 27-35 (AAGIGILTV) were incubated in human serum for the indicated time periods, and antigenic activity was then evaluated in CTL assay by using as effector cells the indicated NY-ESO-1 polyclonal monospecific lines or, in the case of the Melan-A peptide, the Melan-A–specific clone LAU 203/17. Antigen-specific lysis was assessed on 51Cr-labeled T2 cells in the presence of serial dilutions of each degradation sample. (a) Peptide 9-157 tested with line M 9-157 (upper panel) and peptide 9-159 tested with line M 9-159 (lower panel). (b) Peptide 11-157 tested with line M 9-157 (upper panel) or with line M 9-159 (lower panel). (c) Peptide 9-157 C165A tested with line M 9-157 (upper panel) and peptide Melan-A27–35 tested with clone LAU 203/17 (lower panel). The human serum used in this experiment was heat-inactivated, but similar results were obtained by using fresh serum.