Title of article :
CD23 is recognized as tumor-associated antigen (TAA) in B-CLL by CD8+ autologous T lymphocytes
Author/Authors :
Dagmar Bund، نويسنده , , Christine Mayr، نويسنده , , David M. Kofler، نويسنده , , Michael Hallek، نويسنده , , Clemens-Martin Wendtner، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
11
From page :
920
To page :
930
Abstract :
Objective CD23 is constitutively and atypically expressed on malignant B cells in patients with chronic lymphocytic leukemia (B-CLL). Here, we investigated whether CD23-derived peptides might function as B-CLL-specific tumor-associated antigen (TAA). Patients and Methods Using IFN-γ-ELISPOT assays and HLA-A2/dimer-peptide staining we identified autologous, CD23-specific HLA-A0201-restricted T cells after 4 weeks of in vitro culture. Results We were able to expand autologous T cells from 8/11 B-CLL patients by using native and CD40L-activated B-CLL cells as antigen-presenting cells (APCs) in 5 cases whereas for 3 samples an autologous T cell response could only be evoked by use of CD40L-stimulated B-CLL cells as APCs. The number of CD8+ T cells could be expanded during 4 weeks of in vitro culture with native or CD40L-activated B-CLL cells. We could demonstrate that the expanded T cells were also able to secrete IFN-γ upon recognition of the antigen using IFN-γ-ELISPOT assays. Furthermore, these T cells not only recognized HLA-A0201-binding CD23-derived peptides presented by T2 cells, but also CD23-overexpressing autologous B-CLL cells in an MHC-I-restricted manner. Conclusion In sum, CD23-derived peptides were shown to be naturally processed and presented as TAA in primary B-CLL, enabling the expansion of autologous tumor-specific T cells.
Journal title :
Experimental Hematology
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
Experimental Hematology
Record number :
514612
Link To Document :
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