Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0035412 (rhabdomyosarcoma)
6,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In previous reports, we demonstrated that adoptively transferred T cells homed to the tumor site (among other sites) and that amplification of immune responses occurred in situ leading to the generation of cytotoxic CD8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TIL) and macrophages. The present report extends these findings and shows that following adoptive immunotherapy (AIT) of mice bearing the immunogenic transplanted methylcholanthrene-induced rhabdomyosarcoma (MCA/76-9) there was a differential expansion of CD4+ and CD8+ TIL, the numbers peaking on days 6 and 8, respectively. At this time, CD8+ TIL accounted for the majority of Thy-1+ cells. Northern analyses of RNA extracted from positively selected (by panning) Thy-1+, CD8+ and CD4+ TIL isolated 8 days after AIT indicated the following: in five separate experiments, CD4+ cells expressed three- to sixfold more interleukin (IL)2 mRNA and six- to eightfold more IL6 mRNA than CD8+ cells, while CD8+ TIL expressed three- to sixfold more IL2 receptor (IL2R) mRNA and four- to sixfold more interferon-gamma mRNA than CD4+ cells. TIL cultured in 10% fetal bovine serum failed to release IL2 over a 24-h period, whereas both IL6 and interferon-gamma activities were demonstrable. The level of IL2R mRNA expression was reflected by a vigorous proliferative response of CD8+ TIL to exogenous recombinant IL2 and only a low response by CD4+ cells suggesting that most of the CD4+ TIL were in the resting stage. This was confirmed when it was shown that the incubation of panned CD4+ TIL with IL2 supplemented with irradiated spleen cells and "spent" 76-9 tumor culture supernatant (as a source of antigen) induced expansion of TIL resulting in a population consisting of greater than 90% CD4+ TIL. The overall data suggest that the relatively deactivated state of the CD4+ TIL at this particular time reflects the status of the rejection process in terms of the absence or low concentration of stimulating tumor-associated antigen.
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PMID:Differential in situ expansion and gene expression of CD4+ and CD8+ tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes following adoptive immunotherapy in a murine tumor model system. 190 16

MYCN is a well-known oncogene over-expressed in different human malignancies including neuroblastoma (NB), rhabdomyosarcoma, medulloblastoma, astrocytoma, Wilms' tumor, and small cell lung cancer. In the case of NB, MYCN amplification is an established biomarker of poor-prognosis. MYCN belongs to a family of transcription factors (the most important of which is C-MYC) that show a high degree of homology. Down-regulation of MYC protein expression leads to tumor regression in animal models, indicating that MYC proteins represent interesting therapeutic targets. Pre-requisites for a candidate tumor-associated antigen (TAA) to be targeted by immunotherapeutic approaches are the following, (i) expression should be tumor-restricted, (ii) the putative TAA should be up-regulated in cancer cells, and (iii) protein should be processed into immunogenic peptides capable of associating to major histocompatibility complex molecules with high affinity. Indeed, the MYCN protein is not expressed in human adult tissues and up-regulated variably in NB cells, and MYCN peptides capable of associating to HLA-A1 or HLA-A2 molecules with high affinity have been identified. Thus the MYCN protein qualifies as putative TAA in NB. Additional issues that determine the feasibility of targeting a putative TAA with cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) and will be here discussed are the following, (i) the inadequacy of tumor cells per se to act as antigen-presenting cells witnessed, in the case of NB cells, by the low to absent expression of HLA class I molecules, the lack of co-stimulatory molecules and multiple defects in the HLA class I related antigen processing machinery, and (ii) the immune evasion mechanisms operated by cancer cells to fool the host immune system, such as up-regulation of soluble immunosuppressive molecules (e.g., soluble MICA and HLA-G in the case of NB) or generation of immunosuppressive cells in the tumor microenvironment. A final issue that deserves consideration is the strategy used to generate CTL.
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PMID:MYCN: from oncoprotein to tumor-associated antigen. 2316 96