Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027627 (metastases)
103,950 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Peptide specificity of cultured tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) was systematically investigated in a group of HLA-A2.1+ metastatic melanoma patients consecutively referred to our department for surgical treatment. Seven samples from 6 patients were studied. All surgical specimens showed evidence of gp 100, MART-1/Melan-A and Tyrosinase gene expression as detectable by reverse PCR (rPCR). Cultured TIL from 2 patients displayed cytotoxic activity against autologous or HLA-matched EBV-transformed cells previously pulsed with MART-1/Melan-A27-35 peptide. In contrast, no CTL activity against gp100(280-288) or tyrosinase1-9 peptides could be observed. TIL were then repeatedly stimulated in vitro with the same peptides. After 6 restimulation courses at weekly intervals, specific recognition of gp100(280-288) and MART-1/Melan-A peptides was detectable in 3 and 5 TIL populations, respectively. In one case Tyrosinase1-9-specific CTL could be demonstrated. Two TIL populations from metastases resected from a melanoma patient at 6 months' distance showed a different peptide specificity pattern, and no specific CTL could be generated from simultaneously sampled peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC). All peptide-specific CTL populations also displayed significant cytotoxic activity against HLA-A2.1 matched melanoma cell lines expressing the antigens under investigation. Our data indicate that CTL specific for MART-Melan-A27-35, gp100(280-288) or Tyrosinase1-9 peptides could be expanded with varying frequency from TIL derived from 4 out of 6 HLA-A2.1+ patients whose tumors expressed the genes encoding these tumor-associated antigens (TAA).
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PMID:Peptide-specific CTL in tumor infiltrating lymphocytes from metastatic melanomas expressing MART-1/Melan-A, gp100 and Tyrosinase genes: a study in an unselected group of HLA-A2.1-positive patients. 759 2

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.
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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

We applied an enzyme-linked immunospot (ELISPOT) assay for the detection and quantification of blood-derived CD8+ T cells recognizing peptide antigens presented by HLA-A2.1. CD8+ T lymphocytes were isolated from peripheral blood and were stimulated for 40 h with peptide-loaded A2.1-positive 0.174 x CEM.T2 cells. Tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) secreted by single T cells in response to antigen contact was trapped on nitrocellulose membranes precoated with anti-TNF-alpha antibodies and was then immunochemically visualized as spots. With this assay, up to 25% of cloned cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTL) were detected during the test period that recognized defined melanoma antigens in association with HLA-A2.1. CD8+ lymphocytes responsive to a known immunogenic HLA-A2.1-binding peptide from reverse transcriptase of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) were only detectable in HIV-infected patients, but not in anti-HIV-negative donors. T cells reacting with a peptide derived from a mutated cyclin-dependent kinase 4 (CDK4-R24C) were exclusively detected among CD8+ lymphocytes isolated from blood of the patient, whose melanoma had previously been found to carry the CDK4-R24C allele. T cells responding to HLA-A2.1-associated peptides of normal melanocyte differentiation antigens tyrosinase and Melan-A/MART-1 were found at low frequencies in almost all donors tested, which might reflect a natural autoimmunity to these antigens. However, in a melanoma patient we found a few days after surgery of melanoma metastases high frequencies of T cells against Melan-A/MART-1 and tyrosinase peptides (up to 38 per 10(5) CD8+ T cells), which gradually decreased during the following months. In an HIV-infected patient with progressive disease we observed a loss of T cells reactive with the HIV reverse transcriptase peptide. These observations provide evidence that peptide-dependent TNF-alpha spot formation in vitro resulted from previous antigen exposure in vivo. Therefore, the TNF-alpha ELISPOT assay might be useful in monitoring antigen-specific T lymphocyte responses during the natural course of diseases as well as during therapeutic interventions aiming at the induction of protective T cell immunity. In addition, it might help to identify immunodominant T cell epitopes.
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PMID:Detection and quantification of blood-derived CD8+ T lymphocytes secreting tumor necrosis factor alpha in response to HLA-A2.1-binding melanoma and viral peptide antigens. 866 32

Tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs) were grown from four distinct anatomic sites from a patient with metastatic melanoma. The metastatic sites included a tumor-involved lymph node, a subcutaneous lesion obtained from the chest wall, a portion of bowel, and adrenal gland. TILs grown from each anatomic site over the course of 20 days in the presence of 6,000 IU/ml recombinant interleukin-2 exhibited comparable growth rates. Between days 30 and 45, the TILs were a mixture of CD3+ CD4+ and CD3+ CD8+ lymphocytes expressing the alpha beta form of the T-cell receptor. TILs derived from each anatomic site specifically lysed autologous tumor obtained from all four anatomic sites. In fine specificity analysis, the TILs exhibited human leukocyte antigen (HLA-A2)-restricted lysis of fresh tumor targets and cultured melanoma cell lines. Each TIL recognized a product of the MART-1 gene, and specifically, the monomer peptide MART-1(27-35). Thus lymphocytes reactive with the MART-1 melanoma antigen appeared to be widely distributed in diverse metastases in this patient. This information, along with previous data on the reactivity of multiple patients to this antigen, attests to its dominance in the immune reactivity of humans to melanoma.
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PMID:Melanoma tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes derived from four distinct anatomic sites obtained from a single patient: comparison of functional reactivity and melanoma antigen recognition. 868 Jun 54

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.
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PMID:Metastatic potential of human melanoma cells in nude mice--characterisation of phenotype, cytokine secretion and tumour-associated antigens. 868 21

In recent years, it has become evident that T cells can recognize peptides of melanocytic lineage antigens such as gp100, MART-1, and tyrosinase at the tumor cell surface and can subsequently destroy these cells. It is thus feasible to develop immunotherapeutic approaches based on the melanocytic marker profiles of melanoma cells. One of the predictors of the success rate of such a treatment is the extent of positive (target) tumor cells within the lesions of the patient. First, we investigated the presence of these three proteins in 18 human melanoma cell lines using RT-PCR and immunohistochemistry. In 11 cell lines, mRNA and protein of all three markers could be detected; in one cell line, only two markers were present, and six melanoma cell lines showed no evidence for these markers. Secondly, we stained frozen sections of 105 human melanocytic lesions, 13 common nevocellular nevi, 13 atypical nevi, 13 early primary melanomas (Breslow < 1.5 mm), 25 advanced primary melanomas (aPM; Breslow > or =1.5 mm), and 41 melanoma metastases (MM) with antibodies against glycoprotein 100, melanoma antigen recognized by T cells, and tyrosinase. In addition, we used the 3,4-dihydroxy-L-phenylalanine reaction to detect tyrosinase enzyme activity as a confirmation of the tyrosinase immunohistochemical results in a subset of the lesions. In the benign lesions, glycoprotein 100 was more prominently expressed in epidermal melanocytes, whereas melanoma antigen recognized by T cells was encountered in all or nearly all dermal melanocytes in all nevocellular nevi and atypical nevus lesions. Tyrosinase was found in a lower percentage of melanocytes, both in the epidermis and in the dermis within these lesions. With regard to heterogeneity of staining within the malignant lesions, we found that 54% (early primary melanomas), 48% (aPMs), and 56% (MM) of the lesions stained within the same staining category for all three proteins studied. Approximately 17% of the aPM and MM lesions did not show positive tumor cells for any of the three proteins. We conclude that a subgroup of patients with high expression should be selected for immunotherapeutic treatment approaches based on the presence of these proteins.
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PMID:Heterogeneous expression of immunotherapy candidate proteins gp100, MART-1, and tyrosinase in human melanoma cell lines and in human melanocytic lesions. 924 53

The human immune repertoire appears to be capable of recognizing normal antigens expressed by tumor cells. Among these antigens, those of differentiation, characterized by a restricted tissue expression, could be of clinical interest since they may represent a target for immunotherapeutic protocols. In this context we have evaluated, in benign and malignant lesions of the melanocytic lineage, the expression of the Melan-A/MART-1 antigen, which has been shown to be recognized by T cells, of HLA-A2 melanoma patients. The immunohistochemical analysis conducted with a Melan-A/MART-1 monoclonal antibody demonstrated that the antigen expression does not correlate with transformation or tumor progression. At variable levels Melan-A/MART-1, differently from other differentiation antigens, is homogeneously expressed by multiple autologous metastases and by melanoma metastases at different body sites. This tissue distribution adds further biological support to the ongoing use of Melan-A/MART-1-related peptides in active immunotherapy.
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PMID:Melan-A/MART-1 antigen expression in cutaneous and ocular melanomas. 940 52

Human melanoma cells express several antigens which are recognized by autologous and specific CTL clones in association with HLA-class-I molecules. Many of these antigens represent suitable targets for tumor immunotherapy, since their expression in human melanoma cells is common and highly specific. In order to achieve real clinical success with therapeutic vaccination strategies, one important requirement is the expression of the target antigen by all the tumor lesions of a patient. We have studied this issue by assessing, through an RT-PCR approach, the expression of MAGE-1, MAGE-2, MAGE-3, BAGE, GAGE-1/2, Tyrosinase and Melan-A/MART-1 genes in 17 clusters of simultaneous in-transit or regional lymph-node metastases collected from 15 stage-III and 1 stage-IV (AJCC/UICC pTNM system) melanoma patients. In 14 out of 17 clusters of simultaneous metastatic lesions (82%), the homogeneity in the pattern of gene expression within the cluster was complete. Heterogeneity within the same cluster was observed in only 3 out of 17 clusters (18%) and represented only minor features. Our data reveal that, in AJCC-stage-III melanoma patients, different but simultaneous metastatic lesions express the same pattern of antigen-coding genes. These observations have 2 main clinical implications: (i) the antigenic characterization of one single and easily accessible lesion allows identification of optimal targets for an active antigen-specific immunotherapy treatment; (ii) almost all the metastatic lesions are expected to be hit by the immune response eventually induced against the tumor antigen. Moreover, these data suggest that active specific immunotherapy directed against MAGE-1, MAGE-3, BAGE, GAGE-1/2, Melan-A/MART-1 and Tyrosinase antigens could be exploited as an adjuvant treatment to surgery in high-risk AJCC-stage-III-melanoma patients.
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PMID:High homogeneity of MAGE, BAGE, GAGE, tyrosinase and Melan-A/MART-1 gene expression in clusters of multiple simultaneous metastases of human melanoma: implications for protocol design of therapeutic antigen-specific vaccination strategies. 965 May 52

The authors retrospectively tested the potential value of paraffin-reactive monoclonal antibodies (A103 against melan-A, T311 against tyrosinase) and antibody KBA62 as immunohistochemical markers for amelanotic metastatic melanomas. The study cases included 72 amelanotic metastases of known cutaneous melanomas, 59 poorly differentiated carcinomas, 73 sarcomas of varying histogenesis, 4 Leydig cell tumors, 10 high-grade lymphomas, and 6 plasmoblastic/anaplastic myelomas. The results were compared with immunostainings for S-100 protein and HMB-45. HMB-45, antimelan-A, and antityrosinase showed almost identical staining results, with a sensitivity of 0.85 for HMB-45 and of 0.86 for both antimelan-A and for antityrosinase. HMB-45 and antityrosinase both had a specificity of 1.00; the specificity of antimelan-A was 0.95 as a result of a positive reaction in three of three adrenocortical carcinomas and four of four Leydig cell tumors. KBA62 stainings resulted in a sensitivity of 0.86 for melanomas. A positive immunoreactivity of KBA62 alone had a specificity of only 0.83, but in conjunction with anti-S-100 protein (sensitivity, 1.00; specificity, 0.87) and anticytokeratin 8/18/19 (CK), a KBA62+/S-100+/CK- immunophenotype identified all except one of the melanoma cases that were negative for the three melanocyte-specific markers with a specificity of 0.99. In conclusion, we found comparable immunohistochemical sensitivities of HMB-45, antityrosinase, and antimelan-A for a highly specific identification of approximately 85% of amelanotic metastatic melanomas on paraffin sections. Melanomas that were negative for all of these specific markers might be sensitively and specifically detected with anti-S-100 protein and KBA62.
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PMID:Tyrosinase, melan-A, and KBA62 as markers for the immunohistochemical identification of metastatic amelanotic melanomas on paraffin sections. 972 May 2

It has recently been shown that tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) can evoke tumor-specific T-cell-defined immune responses in cancer patients, thereby offering the possibility of treating patients with such antigens. To develop T-cell-based immunotherapeutic approaches for renal cell carcinoma (RCC), we studied the mRNA expression profile of the TAAs RAGE-1, tyrosinase, MAGE-1, MAGE-2, NY-ESO-1, Melan-A/MART-1, glycoprotein (gp) 75, gp100, beta-catenin, PRAME, and MUM-1 in 14 human RCC cell lines and in tissue specimens of 37 primary RCCs, 2 related metastases, and 33 specimens of normal renal epithelium. Reverse transcription-PCR was performed with TAA-reactive primers, and the specificity of the PCR products was confirmed by Southern blot and/or direct sequencing. PRAME (10 of 14 cell lines), RAGE-1 (7 of 14 cell lines), and gp75 (4 of 14 cell lines) antigens were expressed in a high percentage of RCC cell lines, although the level of TAA expression varied among the different RCC cell lines. However, low levels of TAA expression in RCC cells are sufficient for recognition by TAA-specific CTLs. Transcription of tyrosinase, Melan-A/MART-1, MAGE-1, MAGE-2, NY-ESO-1, gp100, beta-catenin, and MUM-1 was not detected in any RCC cell line. Approximately 50% of surgically removed neoplasias expressed at least one TAA. RAGE-1 mRNA expression was found in 8 of 39 (21%) RCC samples, PRAME mRNA expression was found in 15 of 39 (40%) RCC samples, and gp75 mRNA expression was found in 4 of 39 (11%) RCC samples, but the expression levels of these TAAs were heterogeneous in the different RCC lesions. One RCC specimen expressed MAGE-2, whereas transcription was not detected in any RCC specimen for MAGE-1, NY-ESO-1, tyrosinase, Melan-A/MART-1, gp100, beta-catenin, and MUM-1. The normal kidney epithelium samples were negative for any TAA tested. Thus, RAGE-1, PRAME, and gp75 expression is found with a different frequency in surgically removed lesions and in RCC cell lines, suggesting that a subgroup of RCC patients could be selected for immunotherapeutic strategies that may benefit from immunization against the RAGE-1, gp75, and/or PRAME antigens. However, additional targets for T-cell-based immunotherapy of RCC have yet to be identified.
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PMID:Heterogeneous expression of the tumor-associated antigens RAGE-1, PRAME, and glycoprotein 75 in human renal cell carcinoma: candidates for T-cell-based immunotherapies? 975 17


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