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Query: UMLS:C0025202 (
melanoma
)
69,561
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Recent advances in melanogenesis have focused on the role of dihydroxyindole-2-carboxylic acid[(HO)2IndCOOH]. For example, it has been shown that formation of (HO)2IndCOOH from dopachrome is catalyzed by dopachrome tautomerase, that the melanogenic protein tyrosinase-related protein (TRP)-1 can oxidize (HO)2IndCOOH to its indole quinone, that (HO)2IndCOOH-melanins can be synthesized chemically, that mammalian melanins are naturally rich in (HO)2IndCOOH subunits, and that (HO)2IndCOOH is incorporated into melanins of melanomas in mice. The question thus emerges as to the mechanism(s) by which (HO)2IndCOOH and other precursors become incorporated into melanins in vivo. Accordingly, an activity was partially purified that catalyzed melanin formation with (HO)2IndCOOH as a substrate. Analyses of the (HO)2IndCOOH polymerization factor from Cloudman
melanoma
cells revealed the following: it was proteinaceous in that it was heat labile and destroyed by proteinase K; it was a glycoprotein in that it adhered to wheat germ agglutinin and was eluted with N-acetyl glucosamine; it was located predominantly in the melanosomal fraction of cell homogenates; the activity was reduced by exposure to the metal chelators EDTA and EGTA, but not by phenylthiourea, a tyrosinase inhibitor; the (HO)2IndCOOH polymerization reaction was inhibited by superoxide dismutase. In addition, the activity was found with the mouse
pmel 17
/silver locus protein immunopurified from human
melanoma
cells, and was significantly reduced in extracts of mouse melanocytes cultured from silver (si/si) mice compared to extracts from Si/Si melanocytes. In summary, an activity has been identified in human and mouse
melanoma
cells that catalyzes the superoxide-dependent polymerization of (HO)2IndCOOH to melanin in vitro, and appears to be a function of the
pmel 17
/silver protein of the human
pmel 17
gene and the mouse silver locus.
...
PMID:Polymerization of 5,6-dihydroxyindole-2-carboxylic acid to melanin by the pmel 17/silver locus protein. 861 63
Pmel 17
is preferentially expressed in pigment cells in a manner suggestive of involvement in melanin biosynthesis. The gene is identical to the silver (si) pigmentation locus in mice. We now produced a recombinant glutathione-S-transferase-human
Pmel 17
infusion protein and raised polyclonal antibodies against it to confirm the ultrastructural location and presumed site of action predicted by the deduced primary structure of
Pmel 17
/silver, and to authenticate the specificity of the DHICA converting function as inherent to the silver-locus protein. Full-length
Pmel 17
cDNA also produced in insect cells in a baculovirus expression vector to ensure that activity did not originate from a co-precipitated protein. Natural hPmel 17 from human
melanoma
cells has an approximate molecular size of 100 kDa. By immunoperoxidase electron microscopic cytochemistry, the antigen was localized to the limiting membranes of premelanosomes and presumed premelanogenic cytosolic vesicles and, to a minor extent, in the premelanosomal matrix. In an in vitro assay, both the natural and the recombinant
Pmel 17
accelerated the conversion of DHICA to melanin. This activity was inhibited by the anti-
Pmel 17
polyclonal antibodies, indicating that the acceleration of DHICA conversion by natural protein is genuine and cannot be due to contaminating complexed proteins. We suggest that in situ
Pmel 17
/silver is a component of a postulated premelanosomal/melanosomal complex of membrane-bound melanogenic oxidoreductive enzymes and cofactors, in analogy to the electron transfer chain in mitochondria.
...
PMID:Characterization and subcellular localization of human Pmel 17/silver, a 110-kDa (pre)melanosomal membrane protein associated with 5,6,-dihydroxyindole-2-carboxylic acid (DHICA) converting activity. 861 92
Recently, we cloned the cDNA encoding the melanocyte lineage-specific antigen
gp100
and demonstrated that
gp100
is recognised by three different monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) used to diagnose
malignant melanoma
. In addition, we showed that tumour-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL 1200) from a
melanoma
patient reacted specifically with cells transfected with the
gp100
cDNA. Molecular characterisation of the
gp100
cDNA revealed that the
gp100
antigen is highly homologous, but not identical, to another melanocyte-specific protein, pMel17. Here, we report that cells transfected with pMel17 cDNA also react with all three MAbs used to diagnose
malignant melanoma
, NKI-beteb, HMB-45 and HMB-50. Moreover, pMel17 transfectants are specifically lysed by TIL1200. These data demonstrate that antigenic processing of both
gp100
and pMel17 give rise to peptides seen by anti-
melanoma
cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) and are therefore potential targets for immunotherapy of
malignant melanoma
.
...
PMID:pMel17 is recognised by monoclonal antibodies NKI-beteb, HMB-45 and HMB-50 and by anti-melanoma CTL. 862 61
Antigenic peptides derived from differentiation antigens of the melanocyte lineage were recently identified in human melanomas as targets for MHC-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). CTL directed against peptides derived from the Melan A/MART-1, tyrosinase and
gp100
/
Pmel17
antigens can be detected in
melanoma
patients and in healthy controls. The presence of defined antigenic peptides and corresponding precursor CTL in patients with metastatic melanoma opens perspectives for the development of antigen-specific tumor vaccines. In this study, we examined the expression of Melan A/MART-1, tyrosinase and gp100lPmel17 in fresh
melanoma
tissues of HLA-A2+ patients and the spontaneous CTL reactivity against antigenic peptides derived from these antigens. Our results demonstrate an inverse correlation of antigen expression and CTL response to Melan A/MART-1 and tyrosinase in patients with metastatic melanoma. In 2 patients with advanced disease, CTL responses against Melan A/MART-1 and tyrosinase were induced by intradermal immunization with synthetic nona- or deca-peptides derived from these antigens. Metastases increasing in size over time showed a loss of Melan A/MART-1 expression in the presence of CTL in one patient. The regression of a metastasis with persistent tyrosinase expression was observed in the other patient after the induction of CTL, reactive against tyrosinase. We conclude that CTL responses against melanocyte differentiation antigens may mediate regression of antigen-positive tumors and select for antigen-loss variants in vivo.
...
PMID:Inverse relationship of melanocyte differentiation antigen expression in melanoma tissues and CD8+ cytotoxic-T-cell responses: evidence for immunoselection of antigen-loss variants in vivo. 863 62
Human
melanoma
represents the principal cause of death in patients with skin cancer in the United States and Europe. Tumour infiltrating lymphocytes recognizing
melanoma
have been used to identify the tumour antigens recognized by T-cells in the context of MHC class I or class II molecules. Such antigens include MAGE-1, MAGE-3, MART-1/Melan-A,
gp100
, tyrosinase, the tyrosinase-related antigen gp75, the antigen gp15 and the mutated CDK4 and beta-catenin gene-products. The identification of these T-cell epitopes provides us with novel reagents for the development of state-of-the-art treatments and for the (immuno-)monitoring of patients with
melanoma
. In order for treatments, including peptide-based vaccines, to be successful, several conceptual criteria must be met: (1) The patient's tumour must present the relevant epitope(s) integrated into the vaccine, (2) the tumour should express the appropriate restricting major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecule(s) required for patient cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) reactivity, and (3) the patient's T-cell repertoire should be able to react productively against the
melanoma
antigens present in the vaccine. Clinical trials implementing peptide-based vaccines or whole protein therapies have been initiated in the United States and Europe. We suggest that such treatments should include the careful monitoring of anti-tumour T-cell responses. This should include examination of melanoma antigen and MHC class I allele expression in the individual patient's tumour, assessment of the status of the peptide transporter molecules TAP1/TAP2 and evaluation of T-cell mediated immune responses reactive against peptides and autologous
melanoma
. Evaluation of clinical parameters (such as disease-free survival) in conjunction with an examination of immunological parameters may facilitate our understanding of the immune responses against T-cell antigens that are shared among
melanoma
and normal melanocytes, and may ultimately help to identify the most effective immunotherapy for patients with
melanoma
.
Melanoma
Res 1996 Feb
PMID:New treatment options for patients with melanoma: review of melanoma-derived T-cell epitope-based peptide vaccines. 864 65
Human
melanoma
antigens and their epitopes recognized by T cells have been identified using a variety of methods. These antigens are classified as 1) melanocyte specific melanosomal proteins (MART-1,
gp100
, tyrosinase and TRP-1), 2) proteins expressed in testis and a variety of cancers (MAGE-1, MAGE-3, BAGE and GAGE), 3) tumor specific mutated proteins (beta-catenin, MUM-1 and CDK4), and 4) others (p15). Some of the HLA-A2 binding non-mutated
melanoma
epitopes contained non-dominant anchor amino acids and have relatively low HLA-A2 binding affinity, suggesting that these epitopes were likely to be subdominant or cryptic self determinants. The significant correlation observed between vitiligo development and IL2 based immunotherapy suggested that autoreactive T cells specific for these self peptides were involved in
melanoma
regression in vivo. In addition, since adoptive transfer into patients of CTL recognizing these epitopes resulted in tumor regression, these epitopes may be tumor rejection antigens.
Melanoma
reactive CTL were efficiently induced from PBL of patients by in vitro stimulation with PBMC pulsed with these
melanoma
epitopes and may be useful in adoptive transfer protocols for the treatment of patients with metastatic melanoma. An immunization trial using the MART-1 and
gp100
peptides in conjunction with incomplete Freund's adjuvant is in progress. These identified antigens may be useful for the development of new immunotherapies for the treatment of
melanoma
patients as well as for understanding the mechanisms of anti-tumor immune responses and autoimmune disorders against melanocytes.
...
PMID:Human melanoma antigens recognized by T lymphocytes. 868 99
Incidence and mortality of human
malignant melanoma
has risen rapidly over recent decades. Although the notorious resistance to treatment is characteristic for metastatic
malignant melanoma
, only a few experimental models have been established to study the metastatic cascade or to test new alternative treatment modalities. Thus, new human models are wanted. Here, we describe the metastatic behaviour of seven human
melanoma
cell lines derived from two primary cutaneous melanomas (WM 98-1, WM 1341) and five metastases established from liver (UKRV-Mel-4), skin (M7, M13), pleural effusion (UKRV-Mel-2) and lymph node (MV3). All cell lines were analysed for their capacity to grow in nude mice after s.c. and i.v. administration. M13 cells developed liver metastases spontaneously after s.c. injection, and subsequent passages of M13 and M7
melanoma
cells caused liver metastases after i.v. injection, whereas MV3 and WM98-1 gave rise to lung metastases, using the same inoculation route. In contrast, WM 1341, UKRV-Mel-2 and UKRV-Mel-4 grew only very slowly in nude mice after s.c. injection and did not cause any metastases after i.v. or s.c. administration. The pattern of metastases or growth kinetics did not correlate with the interleukin 8 or tumour necrosis factor secretion of cell lines. Adhesion molecules and growth factor receptor expression on the cell lines differed widely, as determined by flow cytometry, with the low metastatic cell lines (UKRV-Mel-2, UKRV-Mel-4 and WM 1341) demonstrating a marked reduction in VLA-1 and VLA-5 expression compared with the metastatic lines (M7, M13, MV3 and WM 98-1). Expression of pigment-related proteins such as tyrosinase, TRP-1, TRP-2, Melan-A/MART-1,
gp100
, MAGE1 or MAGE-3 was not associated with growth and metastatic characteristics of the
melanoma
cell lines analysed. In conclusion, the established human
melanoma
cell lines exhibited diverse growth behaviour in nude mice in congruence with some early established prognostic markers such as VLA-1 and VLA-5. The xenografts provide good models for further study of metastatic processes as well as for evaluation of alternative treatment modalities including new pharmaceutical drugs and gene therapeutic targeting using tissue-specific gene regulatory elements for gene targeting.
...
PMID:Metastatic potential of human melanoma cells in nude mice--characterisation of phenotype, cytokine secretion and tumour-associated antigens. 868 21
Peptide epitopes derived from differentiation antigens of the melanocyte lineage were recently identified in human melanomas as targets for MHC-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL). The characterization of multiple CTL-defined antigenic determinants has opened possibilities of development of antigen-targeted vaccines. In the present study, we determined CTL reactivity against
melanoma
-associated peptides derived from Melan A/MART-1, tyrosinase, and
gp100
/
Pmel17
in 3 HLA-A2+
melanoma
patients. Then, we assessed the immune responses to synthetic
melanoma
-associated peptides injected intradermally. After 3 cycles of immunization with peptide alone, we used systemic GM-CSF as an adjuvant during the fourth cycle of immunization. Enhanced DTH reactions and CD8+ CTL responses were observed after treatment with systemic GM-CSF. Immunohistochemical characterization of DTH-constituting elements revealed infiltrates of CD4+ and CD8+ T lymphocytes and strong expression of IL-2 and gammaIFN, suggesting the activation of CD4+ ThI and CD8+ CTL by peptides presented by MHC-class-I molecules of dermal APC. Objective tumor regression was documented in all patients. We conclude that systemic GM-CSF enhances immune responses to
melanoma
-associated peptides and supports CTL-mediated tumor rejection in vivo.
...
PMID:Granulocyte-macrophage-colony-stimulating factor enhances immune responses to melanoma-associated peptides in vivo. 869 May 25
Expression of basic fibroblast growth factor cDNA or dominantly acting oncogenes, e.g., E1A, in immortalized mouse melanocytes leads to autonomous growth in vitro, depigmentation, and in the case of the oncogenes, tumorigenesis. Because downregulation of pigmentation is a common event in human metastatic melanoma cells grown in culture, we determined the molecular basis of depigmentation in a mouse melanocyte model system. We tested the effect of E1A mutants deficient in their ability to neutralize several regulatory proteins and determined changes in melanogenic gene expression. We identified Microphthalmia as the affected, downregulated transcription factor in melanocytes rendered amelanotic by E1A, basic fibroblast growth factor, or the oncogenes ras or neu, and in an amelanotic cell variant of Cloudman S91 mouse
melanoma
. Against expectations, sequestration of p300, a transcriptional adaptor that mediates responses to cyclic adenosine monophosphate, was not required for the full transforming effects of E1A. Our results suggest that in addition to controlling tyrosinase (albino locus) and tyrosinase-related protein 1 (TR-P1/gp75/brown locus), both known to possess the DNA consensus site for binding the Microphthalmia protein, this transcription factor also controls other melanocyte-specific genes such as pink-eyed dilution and
Pmel 17
(silver), but not tyrosinase-related protein 2 (slaty locus). Furthermore, these findings show that microphthalmia is downregulated not only by experimentally introduced dominantly acting oncogenes but also by the aberrant expression of basic fibroblast growth factor and by spontaneous tumorigenic transformation.
...
PMID:Growth regulatory proteins that repress differentiation markers in melanocytes also downregulate the transcription factor microphthalmia. 875 68
Anti-
melanoma
cytolytic T-lymphocyte (CTL) clones were derived from peripheral blood lymphocytes of HLA-A2
melanoma
patient LB265 after stimulation with the autologous tumor cell line LB265-MEL, which showed high expression of melanocyte-lineage specific genes. Of 55 CTL clones, 46 recognized HLA-A2-restricted antigens. These 46 CTL clones were studied for their ability to specifically release tumor necrosis factor in the presence of COS cells cotransfected with the HLA-A2 gene and the cDNA of either tyrosinase, Melan-A/MART1,
Pmel17
/gpl00, gp75/TRP1, or MSH receptor. Six CTL clones recognized the Melan-A/MART1 antigen, whereas the remaining 40 CTL clones recognized a
Pmel17
/
gp100
antigen. These 40 anti-PmelI7/gpl00 CTL clones were all able to lyse T2 cells pulsed with the antigenic peptide YLEPGPVTA, as previously reported. The T-cell receptor beta chain hypervariable region was sequenced and found to be identical in the 15 CTL clones analyzed. Taken together, these data show a high frequency of Pmell7/
gp100
-specific T cells in autologous antitumor CTL clones derived from peripheral blood of a
melanoma
patient.
...
PMID:The majority of autologous cytolytic T-lymphocyte clones derived from peripheral blood lymphocytes of a melanoma patient recognize an antigenic peptide derived from gene Pmel17/gp100. 875 41
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