Coupling and uncoupling of tumor immunity and autoimmunity

WB Bowne, R Srinivasan, JD Wolchok… - The Journal of …, 1999 - rupress.org
WB Bowne, R Srinivasan, JD Wolchok, WG Hawkins, NE Blachere, R Dyall, JJ Lewis…
The Journal of experimental medicine, 1999rupress.org
Self-antigens, in the form of differentiation antigens, are commonly recognized by the
immune system on melanoma and other cancers. We have shown previously that active
immunization of mice against the melanocyte differentiation antigen, a tyrosinase-related
protein (TRP) gp75TRP-1 (the brown locus protein) expressed by melanomas, could induce
tumor immunity and autoimmunity manifested as depigmentation. In this system, tumor
immunity and autoimmunity were mediated by autoantibodies. Here, we characterize …
Self-antigens, in the form of differentiation antigens, are commonly recognized by the immune system on melanoma and other cancers. We have shown previously that active immunization of mice against the melanocyte differentiation antigen, a tyrosinase-related protein (TRP) gp75TRP-1 (the brown locus protein) expressed by melanomas, could induce tumor immunity and autoimmunity manifested as depigmentation. In this system, tumor immunity and autoimmunity were mediated by autoantibodies. Here, we characterize immunity against another tyrosinase family glycoprotein TRP-2 (the slaty locus protein), using the same mouse model and method of immunization. As observed previously for gp75TRP-1, immunity was induced by DNA immunization against a xenogeneic form of TRP-2, but not against the syngeneic gene, and depended on CD4+ cells. Immunization against TRP-2 induced autoantibodies and autoreactive cytotoxic T cells. In contrast to immunization against gp75TRP-1, both tumor immunity and autoimmunity required CD8+ T cells, but not antibodies. Only autoimmunity required perforin, whereas tumor immunity proceeded in the absence of perforin. Thus, immunity induced against two closely related autoantigens that are highly conserved throughout vertebrate evolution involved qualitatively different mechanisms, i.e., antibody versus CD8+ T cell. However, both pathways led to tumor immunity and identical phenotypic manifestations of autoimmunity.
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