Enzymatic discovery of a HER-2/neu epitope that generates cross-reactive T cells.

J Immunol

Department of Immunology, College of Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.

Published: January 2013

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Patients with HER-2/neu-expressing breast cancer are still at risk for relapse after standard treatments, prompting the development of vaccines targeting the HER-2/neu protein to prevent this.
  • - The study investigates how the peptide p369-377, an important target for immune responses, is processed by the proteasome from larger HER-2/neu fragments but finds it is not processed effectively, while another peptide, p373-382, is processed well and binds HLA-A2 more strongly.
  • - CTLs specific for the newly identified peptide p373-382 demonstrate higher cytotoxicity against breast cancer cells compared to those targeting p369-377, suggesting p373-382 may be a more effective

Article Abstract

Patients with HER-2/neu-expressing breast cancer remain at risk for relapse following standard therapy. Vaccines targeting HER-2/neu to prevent relapse are in various phases of clinical testing. Many vaccines incorporate the HER-2/neu HLA-A2-binding peptide p369-377 (KIFGSLAFL), because it has been shown that CTLs specific for this epitope can directly kill HER-2/neu-overexpressing breast cancer cells. Thus, understanding how tumors process this epitope may be important for identifying those patients who would benefit from immunization. Proteasome preparations were used to determine if p369-377 was processed from larger HER-2/neu-derived fragments. HPLC, mass spectrometry, cytotoxicity assays, IFN-γ ELISPOT, and human breast cancer cell lines were used to assess the proteolytic fragments. Processing of p369-377 was not detected by purified 20S proteasome and immunoproteasome, indicating that tumor cells may not be capable of processing this Ag from the HER-2/neu protein and presenting it in the context of HLA class I. Instead, we show that other extracellular domain HER-2/neu peptide sequences are consistently processed by the proteasomes. One of these sequences, p373-382 (SLAFLPESFD), bound HLA-A2 stronger than did p369-377. CTLs specific for p373-382 recognized both p373-382 and p369-377 complexed with HLA-A2. CTLs specific for p373-382 also killed human breast cancer cell lines at higher levels than did CTLs specific for p369-377. Conversely, CTLs specific for p369-377 recognized p373-382. Peptide p373-382 is a candidate epitope for breast cancer vaccines, as it is processed by proteasomes and binds HLA-A2.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3529812PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1201264DOI Listing

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