Formation of major histocompatibility (MHC)-peptide-T cell receptor (TCR) complexes is central to initiation of an adaptive immune response. These complexes form through initial stabilization of the MHC fold via binding of a short peptide, and subsequent interaction of the TCR to form a ternary complex, with contacts made predominantly through the complementarity-determining region (CDR) loops of the TCR. Stimulation of an immune response is central to cancer immunotherapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe small-molecule, water-soluble molecular beacon probe 1 is hydrolyzed by the lysate and living cells of human prostate cancer cell lines (LNCaP), resulting in strong green fluorescence. In contrast, probe 1 does not undergo significant hydrolysis in either the lysate or living cells of human nontumorigenic prostate cells (RWPE-1). These results, corroborated by UV-Vis spectroscopy and fluorescent microscopy, reveal that probe 1 is a sensitive and specific fluorogenic and chromogenic sensor for the detection of human prostate cancer cells among nontumorigenic prostate cells and that carboxylesterase activity is a specific biomarker for human prostate cancer cells.
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