Chemotherapy enhances cross-presentation of nuclear tumor antigens

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Abstract

Cross-presentation of tumor antigen is essential for efficient priming of naïve CD8+T lymphocytes and induction of effective anti-tumor immunity. We hypothesized that the subcellular location of a tumor antigen could affect the efficiency of cross-presentation, and hence the outcome of anti-tumor responses to that antigen. We compared cross-presentation of a nominal antigen expressed in the nuclear, secretory, or cytoplasmic compartments of B16 melanoma tumors. All tumors expressed similar levels of the antigen. The antigen was cross-presented from all compartments but when the concentration was low, nuclear antigen was less efficiently cross-presented than antigen from other cellular locations. The efficiency of cross-presentation of the nuclear antigen was improved following chemotherapy-induced tumor cell apoptosis and this correlated with an increase in the proportion of effector CTL. These data demonstrate that chemotherapy improves nuclear tumor antigen cross-presentation and could be important for anti-cancer immunotherapies that target nuclear antigens.

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Anyaegbu, C. C., Lake, R. A., Heel, K., Robinson, B. W., & Fisher, S. A. (2014). Chemotherapy enhances cross-presentation of nuclear tumor antigens. PLoS ONE, 9(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0107894

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