The p53 protein is accumulated in tumor cells of many human cancers and can elicit in vivo humoral and proliferative responses. Rare reports about p53-mediated tumor recognition by CTLs have remained questioned. We therefore studied a panel of breast tumor and melanoma cell lines that we assayed for the presence of accumulated p53 and surface HLA-A2 and for the presentation of p53 epitopes. From PBMC of a healthy donor, we have generated a CTL line, D5/L9V, directed against HLA-A2-restricted peptide 264–272 from wild-type p53. It efficiently lysed breast adenocarcinomas MCF-7, MCF7/RA1, and MDA-MB-231, and melanoma M8, which all accumulate the p53 protein. Using competition assays, we made sure that tumor lysis by D5/L9V was due to recognition of endogenously produced p53 peptide 264–272 associated with the HLA-A2.1 molecule on the surface of these tumor cells. Cells with undetectable levels of wild-type p53, such as lymphoblastoid cells and melanoma M74, were not recognized by D5/L9V. Neither were breast tumor cell line MCF7/ADR nor melanoma line M44 because of HLA loss. This study therefore shows that it is possible to obtain in vitro CTL lines that specifically recognize a p53 epitope spontaneously presented by a variety of HLA-A2+ transformed cell lines provided they display abnormal patterns of p53 expression. This work points out that breast tumors and melanomas share a p53 epitope, and raises hopes for future immunotherapeutic approaches.
CITATION STYLE
Gnjatic, S., Cai, Z., Viguier, M., Chouaib, S., Guillet, J.-G., & Choppin, J. (1998). Accumulation of the p53 Protein Allows Recognition by Human CTL of a Wild-Type p53 Epitope Presented by Breast Carcinomas and Melanomas. The Journal of Immunology, 160(1), 328–333. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.160.1.328
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