Circumventing tolerance to a human MDM2-derived tumor antigen by TCR gene transfer

T Stanislawski, RH Voss, C Lotz, E Sadovnikova… - Nature …, 2001 - nature.com
T Stanislawski, RH Voss, C Lotz, E Sadovnikova, RA Willemsen, J Kuball, T Ruppert…
Nature immunology, 2001nature.com
We identified a tumor-associated cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) epitope derived from the
widely expressed human MDM2 oncoprotein and were able to bypass self-tolerance to this
tumor antigen in HLA-A* 0201 (A2. 1) transgenic mice and by generating A2. 1-negative,
allo-A2. 1–restricted human T lymphocytes. A broad range of malignant, as opposed to
nontransformed cells, were killed by high-avidity transgenic mouse and allogeneic human
CTLs specific for the A2. 1-presented MDM2 epitope. Whereas the self-A2. 1–restricted …
Abstract
We identified a tumor-associated cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) epitope derived from the widely expressed human MDM2 oncoprotein and were able to bypass self-tolerance to this tumor antigen in HLA-A*0201 (A2.1) transgenic mice and by generating A2.1-negative, allo-A2.1–restricted human T lymphocytes. A broad range of malignant, as opposed to nontransformed cells, were killed by high-avidity transgenic mouse and allogeneic human CTLs specific for the A2.1-presented MDM2 epitope. Whereas the self-A2.1–restricted human T cell repertoire gave rise only to low-avidity CTLs unable to recognize the natural MDM2 peptide, human A2.1+ T lymphocytes were turned into efficient MDM2-specific CTLs upon expression of wild-type and partially humanized high-affinity T cell antigen receptor (TCR) genes derived from the transgenic mice. These results demonstrate that TCR gene transfer can be used to circumvent self-tolerance of autologous T lymphocytes to universal tumor antigens and thus provide the basis for a TCR gene transfer–based broad-spectrum immunotherapy of malignant disease.
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