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Query: EC:1.10.3.1 (
tyrosinase
)
9,065
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An important element in melanoma vaccine construction is to identify peptides from melanoma-associated Ags that have immunogenic potential in humans and are recognized by CD8+ T cells in vivo. To identify such peptides, we evaluated
HLA
-A*02+ melanoma patients immunized to a polyvalent vaccine containing multiple Ags, including MAGE-3, Melan-A/MART-1, gp100,
tyrosinase
, melanocortin receptor (MC1R), and dopachrome tautomerase (TRP-2). Using a filter spot assay, we measured peripheral blood CD8+ T cell responses, before and after immunization, to a panel of 45
HLA
-A*0201-restricted peptides derived from these Ags. The peptides were selected for immunogenic potential based on their strong binding affinity in vitro to
HLA
-A*0201. Vaccine treatment induced peptide-specific CD8+ T cell responses to 22 (47.8%) of the peptides. The most striking finding was the
HLA
-independent heterogeneity of responses to both peptides and Ags. All responding patients reacted to different combination of peptides and Ags even though the responding patients were all A*0201+ and the peptides were all A*0201-restricted. From 9 to 27% of patients developed a CD8+ T cell response to at least one peptide from each Ag, but no more than 3 (14%) reacted to the same peptide from the same Ag. This heterogeneity of responses to individual peptides and Ags in patients with the same haplotype points to the need to construct vaccines of multiple peptides or Ags to maximize the proportion of responding patients.
...
PMID:HLA-independent heterogeneity of CD8+ T cell responses to MAGE-3, Melan-A/MART-1, gp100, tyrosinase, MC1R, and TRP-2 in vaccine-treated melanoma patients. 986 32
To isolate melanoma Ags recognized by T cells, cDNA libraries made from melanoma cell lines were screened with four CTLs derived from tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) that were able to recognize melanoma cells in a HLA-A1, -A2, or -A3 restricted manner. Although cDNAs encoding the previously identified melanoma Ags,
tyrosinase
and gp100, were isolated, these TIL were found to recognize previously unidentified peptides. An HLA-A1-restricted CTL, TIL1388, was found to recognize a
tyrosinase
peptide (SSDYVIPIGTY), and an
HLA
-A3-restricted CTL, TIL1351, recognized a gp100 peptide (LIYRRRLMK). CTL clones isolated from the HLA-A2-restricted TIL1383 recognized a gp100 peptide (RLMKQDFSV). HLA-A2-restricted CTL, TIL1200, recognized a gp100 peptide (RLPRIFCSC). Replacement of either cysteine residue with alpha-amino butyric acid in the gp100 peptide, RLPRIFCSC, enhanced CTL recognition, suggesting that the peptide epitope naturally presented on the tumor cell surface may contain reduced cysteine residues. Oxidation of these cysteines might have occurred during the course of the synthesis or pulsing of the peptide in culture. These modifications may have important implications for the development of efficient peptide-based vaccines. These newly identified peptide epitopes can extend the ability to perform immunotherapy using synthetic peptides to a broader population of patients, especially those expressing HLA-A1 or
HLA
-A3 for whom only a few melanoma epitopes have previously been identified.
...
PMID:Identification of new melanoma epitopes on melanosomal proteins recognized by tumor infiltrating T lymphocytes restricted by HLA-A1, -A2, and -A3 alleles. 986 34
The spontaneous cytotoxic T cell responses to melanoma differentiation antigens and influenza matrix peptide were compared in 20
HLA
-A2+ melanoma patients and 17 healthy A2+ individuals. Cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses were determined by mixed lymphocyte peptide culture (MLPC) involving two stimulations of unfractionated peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBLs) with peptide in vitro. CTL responses to Melan-A 9-mer (amino acids 27-35, AAGIGILTV) peptide were detected in 4 out of 16 normal individuals, but in none of the melanoma patients. CTL specific for influenza matrix peptide were frequently found in both normal individuals and melanoma patients, suggesting that generalized immuno-suppression was not responsible for this difference. No significant responses were observed in either normal individuals or melanoma patients to Melan-A 10-mer (26-35, EAAGIGILTV), two gp1OO epitopes (280-288, YLEPGPVTA; 457466, LLDGTATLRL) and two
tyrosinase
epitopes (1-9, MLLAVLYCL; 368-376, YMDGMSQV). Melan-A (27-35)-specific CTL cells generated by normal individuals and melanoma patients recognized both synthetic peptide-pulsed T2 cells and two
HLA
-A2+, Melan-A+ melanoma cell lines (ME272, LAR1) in an antigen-specific, MHC class I restricted manner. T cells generated against Melan-A 9-mer were also able to recognize Melan-A 10-mer-pulsed target cells. Spontaneous CTL responses to Melan-A 9-mer from three known responder normal individuals were further evaluated over a prolonged time course (6-11 months). All 3 subjects demonstrated specific Melan-A 9-mer responses throughout the study period, although lytic activity fluctuated over time for a given individual. We found the MLPC assay to be reliable and easy to perform for monitoring T cell responses, although it may still not be sufficiently sensitive to detect low numbers of precursor T cells.
...
PMID:Spontaneous T cell responses to melanoma differentiation antigens from melanoma patients and healthy subjects. 987 71
We have shown the presence of
tyrosinase
-reactive T cells in the peripheral blood of melanoma patients, who had been in remission after treatment with IL-2-containing regimens. In this consecutive study, we analyzed the T-cell response to various peptides derived from
tyrosinase
in serial blood samples obtained from 7 stage-IV melanoma patients before, during and following treatment. All patients were treated within a randomized trial (EORTC 18951) with cisplatin (CDDP), dacarbazine (DTIC), interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) +/- interleukin-2 (IL-2). Using an ELISPOT assay detecting peptide-specific IFN-gamma release, we measured the T-cell response to 4 different HLA class I-binding peptide epitopes derived from
tyrosinase
containing an HLA-A2.1-, HLA-A24- or
HLA
-B44-binding motif in peripheral-blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). In one patient,
tyrosinase
-reactive T cells were detected before therapy. In 4 out of 7 patients,
tyrosinase
-reactive T cells against both HLA-A2.1-binding peptides and the B44-binding peptide became detectable at frequencies of up to 30 in 5 x 10(5) lymphocytes following treatment. These patients received CDDP, DTIC and IFN-alpha, 2 of them without IL-2 and 2 with IL-2, resulting in one complete remission and 3 partial remissions. Two patients relapsed 8 and 9 months after treatment. At the time of relapse, no T cells reactive with
tyrosinase
were detectable. Our results show that high frequencies of
tyrosinase
-reactive T cells in the peripheral blood of melanoma patients can be induced by chemotherapy in combination with IFN-alpha, regardless of concomitant IL-2 administration.
...
PMID:Induction of tyrosinase-reactive T cells by treatment with dacarbazine, cisplatin, interferon-alpha +/- interleukin-2 in patients with metastatic melanoma. 993 27
We identified circulating CD8+ T-cell populations specific for the tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) MART-1 (27-35) or
tyrosinase
(368-376) in six of eleven patients with metastatic melanoma using peptide/
HLA
-A*0201 tetramers. These TAA-specific populations were of two phenotypically distinct types: one, typical for memory/effector T cells; the other, a previously undescribed phenotype expressing both naive and effector cell markers. This latter type represented more than 2% of the total CD8+ T cells in one patient, permitting detailed phenotypic and functional analysis. Although these cells have many of the hallmarks of effector T cells, they were functionally unresponsive, unable to directly lyse melanoma target cells or produce cytokines in response to mitogens. In contrast, CD8+ T cells from the same patient were able to lyse EBV-pulsed target cells and showed robust allogeneic responses. Thus, the clonally expanded TAA-specific population seems to have been selectively rendered anergic in vivo. Peptide stimulation of the TAA-specific T-cell populations in other patients failed to induce substantial upregulation of CD69 expression, indicating that these cells may also have functional defects, leading to blunted activation responses. These data demonstrate that systemic TAA-specific T-cell responses can develop de novo in cancer patients, but that antigen-specific unresponsiveness may explain why such cells are unable to control tumor growth.
...
PMID:Characterization of circulating T cells specific for tumor-associated antigens in melanoma patients. 1037 7
In advanced stages of malignant melanoma (MM), metastases to the CNS are frequently observed. Few results are available on trophic factors and immunological features involved in the process of invasion and adhesion of circulating metastatic cells into the CNS. A direct comparison of remote metastases found in different locations of the same patient might help to identify such properties. For this purpose, we screened a panel of MM cell cultures, which had been established from patients with surgically removed MM lesions of the CNS, for expression and regulation of immunorelevant molecules. The results were compared with standard controls and cultures established from non-CNS metastatic lesions of the same patients. No significant differences were observed for expression of
HLA
-I,
HLA
-II, ICAM-1 and the melanoma-associated antigens Mage-3, MelanA and
tyrosinase
. Constitutive expression of the neuronal cell adhesion molecule (NCAM) was found in all CNS-derived samples and in fewer than 50% of non-CNS derived cultures. IFN-gamma was found to have a weak up-regulating effect in all non-CNS-derived cultures, except normal melanocytes. However, in 6/7 CNS-derived cultures, pre-treatment with IFN-gamma reduced expression of NCAM to 28% to 77% of the level in untreated cultures. The presence and regulation of NCAM differs between MM cells derived from CNS metastases and non-CNS-derived melanocytic cells. Thus, NCAM might be a candidate immunoregulating molecule involved in the formation of CNS metastases of MM.
...
PMID:Inverse regulation of neuronal cellular adhesion molecule (NCAM) by IFN-gamma in melanoma cell cultures established from CNS lesions. 1044 20
The human
tyrosinase
gene codes for two distinct antigens that are recognized by
HLA
-A*0201-restricted CTLs. For one of them,
tyrosinase
peptide 368-376, the sequence identified by mass spectrometry in melanoma cell eluates differs from the gene-encoded sequence as a result of posttranslational modification of amino acid residue 370 (asparagine to aspartic acid). Here, we used fluorescent tetrameric complexes ("tetramers") of
HLA
-A*0201 and
tyrosinase
peptide 368-376 (YMDGTMSQV) to characterize the CD8+ T-cell response to this antigen in lymphoid cell populations from HLA-A2 melanoma patients. Taking advantage of the presence of significant numbers of tetramer-positive CD8+ T cells in tumor-infiltrated lymph node cells from a melanoma patient, we derived polyclonal and monoclonal
tyrosinase
peptide 368-376-specific CTLs by tetramer-guided flow cytometric sorting. These CTLs efficiently and specifically lysed
HLA
-A*0201- and
tyrosinase
-positive melanoma cells. As assessed with
tyrosinase
peptide variants, the fine antigen specificity of the CTLs was quite diverse at the clonal level. Flow cytometric analysis of PBMCs stained with tetramers showed that
tyrosinase
peptide 368-376-specific CD8+ T cells were hardly detectable in peripheral blood of melanoma patients. However, significant numbers of such cells were detected after short-term stimulation of CD8+ lymphocytes with
tyrosinase
peptide 368-376 in 6 of 10 HLA-A2 melanoma patients. Taken together, these findings emphasize the significant contribution of the natural
tyrosinase
peptide 368-376 to the antigenic specificities recognized by the tumor-reactive CTLs that may develop in HLA-A2 melanoma patients.
...
PMID:Analysis of the cytolytic T lymphocyte response of melanoma patients to the naturally HLA-A*0201-associated tyrosinase peptide 368-376. 1046 6
Vaccination with tumor-associated antigens is a promising approach for cancer immunotherapy. Because the majority of these antigens are normal self antigens, they may require suitable delivery systems to promote their immunogenicity. A recombinant vector based on the modified vaccinia virus Ankara (MVA) was used for expression of human
tyrosinase
, a melanoma-specific differentiation antigen, and evaluated for its efficacy as an antitumor vaccine. Stable recombinant viruses (MVA-hTyr) were constructed that have deleted the selection marker lacZ and efficiently expressed human
tyrosinase
in primary human cells and cell lines. Tyrosinase-specific human CTLs were activated in vitro by MVA-hTyr-infected,
HLA
-A*0201-positive human dendritic cells. Importantly, an efficient
tyrosinase
- and melanoma-specific CTL response was induced in vitro using MVA-hTyr-infected autologous dendritic cells as activators for peripheral blood mononuclear cells derived from
HLA
-A*0201-positive melanoma patients despite prior vaccination against smallpox. Immunization of
HLA
-A*0201/Kb transgenic mice with MVA-hTyr induced A*0201-restricted CTLs specific for the human
tyrosinase
-derived peptide epitope 369-377. These in vivo primed CTLs were of sufficiently high avidity to recognize and lyse human melanoma cells, which present the endogenously processed
tyrosinase
peptide in the context of A*0201. Tyrosinase-specific CTL responses were significantly augmented by repeated vaccination with MVA-hTyr. These findings demonstrate that
HLA
-restricted CTLs specific for human tumor-associated antigens can be efficiently generated by immunization with recombinant MVA vaccines. The results are an essential basis for MVA-based vaccination trials in cancer patients.
...
PMID:Modified vaccinia virus Ankara for delivery of human tyrosinase as melanoma-associated antigen: induction of tyrosinase- and melanoma-specific human leukocyte antigen A*0201-restricted cytotoxic T cells in vitro and in vivo. 1051 9
Lymphocytes expanded from excised specimens can be used to characterize intratumoral T cell responses. These analyses, however, are limited to one time point in the natural history of the removed tumor. The expansion of autologous tumor cells and tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) from fine needle aspirates (FNA) of tumors potentially allows a dynamic evaluation of T cell responses within the same lesion at moments relevant to the disease course or response to therapy. Fourteen TIL cultures and 8 tumor cell lines were generated from 18 FNA (12 patients). Five of six TIL that could be tested against autologous tumor demonstrated specific reactivity. Two additional TIL for which no autologous tumor was available demonstrated recognition of
HLA
-matched melanoma cell lines. Serial FNA of the same lesions were performed in five
HLA
-A*0201 patients vaccinated with the emulsified melanoma Ag (MA) epitopes: MART-1:27-35;
tyrosinase
:368-376(370D); gp100:280-288(288V); and gp100:209-217 (210M). FNA material was separately cultured for a short time in IL-2 (300 IU/ml) after stimulation with irradiated autologous PBMC pulsed with each peptide or FluM1:58-66 (1 micromol/ml). No peptide-specific TIL could be expanded from prevaccination FNA. However, after vaccination, TIL specific for gp100:280(g280), gp100:209 (g209), and MART-1:27-35 (MART-1)-related epitopes were identified in three, three, and two patients, respectively. No Flu reactivity could be elicited in TIL, whereas it was consistently present in parallel PBMC cultures. This excluded PBMC contamination of the FNA material. This analysis suggests the feasibility of TIL expansion from minimal FNA material and localization of vaccine-specific T cells at the tumor site.
...
PMID:Expansion of tumor-T cell pairs from fine needle aspirates of melanoma metastases. 1060 47
It is generally considered that MHC class I-restricted antigens are recognized by CD8+ T cells, whereas MHC class II-restricted antigens are recognized by CD4+ T cells. In the present study, we report an MHC class I-restricted CD4+ T cell isolated from the tumor infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) of a patient with metastatic melanoma. TIL 1383 I recognized
HLA
-A2+ melanoma cell lines but not autologous transformed B cells or fibroblasts. The antigen recognized by TIL 1383 I was
tyrosinase
, and the epitope was the 368-376 peptide. Antibody blocking assays confirmed that TIL 1383 I was MHC class I restricted, and the CD4 and CD8 coreceptors did not contribute significantly to antigen recognition. TIL 1383 I was weakly cytolytic and secreted cytokines in a pattern consistent with it being a Th1 cell. The avidity of TIL 1383 I for peptide pulsed targets is 10-100-fold lower than most melanoma-reactive CD8+ T cell clones. These CD4+ T cells may represent a relatively rare population of T cells that express a T-cell receptor capable of cross-reacting with an MHC class I/peptide complex with sufficient affinity to allow triggering in the absence of the CD4 coreceptor.
...
PMID:MHC class I-restricted recognition of a melanoma antigen by a human CD4+ tumor infiltrating lymphocyte. 1062 17
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