Functional analysis of antigen-specific T lymphocytes by serial measurement of gene expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells and tumor specimens

US Kammula, KH Lee, AI Riker, E Wang… - The Journal of …, 1999 - journals.aai.org
US Kammula, KH Lee, AI Riker, E Wang, GA Ohnmacht, SA Rosenberg, FM Marincola
The Journal of Immunology, 1999journals.aai.org
The cloning of cancer Ags recognized by T cells has provided potentially new tools to
enhance immunity against metastatic cancer. The biological monitoring of effective
immunization has, however, remained a dilemma. We describe here a sensitive molecular
quantitation methodology that allows analysis of in vivo immune response to vaccination.
Metastatic melanoma patients were immunized with a synthetically modified peptide epitope
(209-2M) from the melanoma self-Ag gp100. Using serial gene expression analysis, we …
Abstract
The cloning of cancer Ags recognized by T cells has provided potentially new tools to enhance immunity against metastatic cancer. The biological monitoring of effective immunization has, however, remained a dilemma. We describe here a sensitive molecular quantitation methodology that allows analysis of in vivo immune response to vaccination. Metastatic melanoma patients were immunized with a synthetically modified peptide epitope (209-2M) from the melanoma self-Ag gp100. Using serial gene expression analysis, we report functional evidence of vaccine-induced CTL reactivity in fresh cells obtained directly from the peripheral blood of postimmunized patients. Further, we demonstrate in vivo localization of vaccine-induced immune response within the tumor microenvironment. The results of these molecular assays provide direct evidence that peptide immunization in humans can result in tumor-specific CTL that localize to metastatic sites.
journals.aai.org