Molecular characterization of defective antigen processing in human prostate cancer

MG Sanda, NP Restifo, JC Walsh… - JNCI: Journal of the …, 1995 - academic.oup.com
JNCI: Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1995academic.oup.com
Background: Gene-modified tumor cell vaccines have shown efficacy in animal models of
malignancy, including prostate cancer. Class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC)
assembly and function in the cellular targets of such therapies is pivotal in determining the
efficacy of specific cytokine-secreting tumor vaccines. Purpose To help guide development
of genetically engineered vaccine therapy for human prostate cancer, potential immune
resistance pathways were evaluated by analysis of class I MHC assembly in prostate cancer …
Abstract
Background:Gene-modified tumor cell vaccines have shown efficacy in animal models of malignancy, including prostate cancer. Class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC) assembly and function in the cellular targets of such therapies is pivotal in determining the efficacy of specific cytokine-secreting tumor vaccines.Purpose To help guide development of genetically engineered vaccine therapy for human prostate cancer, potential immune resistance pathways were evaluated by analysis of class I MHC assembly in prostate cancer cells. Method: Class I MHC assembly in metastasis-derived human prostate cancer cell lines (LNCaP, PPC-1, DU-145, PC-3, and TSU) and a normal prostate-derived cell line (TP-2) were characterized by phenotypic, molecular, and functional assays. Assembled class I MHC and antigen was measured by flow cytometry; mRNA levels of assembly components (class I MHC heavy chain,; β2-microglobulin, and the antigen transporter gene product TAP-2) were determined; and antigen processing was measured with a chimeric reconstituted system using vaccinia vectors. Restoration of antigen processing was attempted by interferon gamma stimulation and by transfection with mouse class I MHC heavy-chain cDNA. Results: Assembled class I MHC was underexpressed in two (LNCaP and PPC-1) of five prostate cancer cell lines compared with normal prostate-derived controls. PPC-1 cells underexpressed TAP-2 mRNA despite abundant class I MHC and β2-microglobulin message. Induction of TAP-2 by interferon gamma indicated that coding sequences for TAP-2 message were present in PPC-1. Resistance to cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) lysis showed a functional defect in antigen transport by PPC-1 cells; reversal of the molecular defect with interferon gamma led to restoration of functional antigen processing. In contrast, LNCaP cells had competent antigen transport but deficient class I MHC heavy-chain function despite abundant class I MHC RNA; though refractory to stimulation by interferon gamma, this defect responded to transfection of class I MHC heavy-chain cDNA. Conclusions: Metastatic prostate cancer cells can escape T-cell recognition via divergent mechanisms of defective class I MHC assembly. The specific under-expression of TAP-2 gene product in PPC-1 cells contrasts with prior studies of TAP gene underexpression in lung cancer (which concurrently underexpressed class I MHC heavy chain) and provides evidence for a regulatory pathway controlling TAP-2 gene expression in human cancers that may not affect class I MHC heavy-chain expression- Implications:In clinical application of gene therapy for prostate cancer, these findings provide a rationale for focusing on strategies that can circumvent sole reliance on class I MHC-mediated tumor cell recognition by CTL. [J Natl Cancer Inst 87: 280–285, 1995]
Oxford University Press