Human polymorphic epithelial mucin (PEM, MUC1) is a high molecular weight transmembrane glycoprotein expressed on the apical cell surface of glandular epithelium and is over-expressed and hypo-glycosylated in adenocarcinomas. The extracellular part of the molecule consists mainly of a variable number of 20 amino acid repeats that contain cryptic epitopes exposed in malignancy. The objective of our study was to determine whether humanized MUC1 MAbs and Abs induced by vaccination of breast cancer patients with MUC1 peptides can effect an antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe objective of this study was to demonstrate the presence of proliferative T cell responses to human polymorphic epithelial mucin (MUC1) and its tandem-repeat peptides in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) from ovarian cancer patients and from controls and to correlate these cellular responses to a humoral response to MUC1. PBMC were obtained from 6 healthy women, from 13 women in the third trimester of pregnancy and from 21 ovarian cancer patients. Only 1 of the 6 healthy women showed a weak primary proliferative response (stimulation index, SI <2) to a 20-mer MUC1 tandem-repeat peptide in the presence of interleukin-2 (IL-2).
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