Department of General, Thoracic, Vascular and Transplantation Surgery, Section Molecular Oncology and Immunotherapy, University of Rostock, Schillingallee 35, 18055 Rostock, Germany.
BMC Immunol. 2011 Jul 10;12:38. doi: 10.1186/1471-2172-12-38.
Multidrug resistance (MDR) is a clinically, highly relevant phenomenon. Under chemotherapy many tumors show an increasing resistance towards the applied substance(s) and to a certain extent also towards other agents. An important molecular cause of this phenomenon is an increased expression of transporter proteins. The functional relationship between high expression levels and chemotherapy resistance makes these MDR and MRP (MDR related protein) proteins to interesting therapeutic targets. We here wanted to systematically analyze, whether these proteins are tumor specific antigens which could be targeted immunologically.
Using the reverse immunology approach, 30 HLA-A2.1 restricted MDR and MRP derived peptides (MDP) were selected. Stimulated T cell lines grew well and mainly contained activated CD8+ cells. Peptide specificity and HLA-A2.1 restriction were proven in IFN-γ-ELISpot analyses and in cytotoxicity tests against MDP loaded target cells for a total of twelve peptides derived from MDR-1, MDR-3, MRP-1, MRP-2, MRP-3 and MRP-5. Of note, two of these epitopes are shared between MDR-1 and MDR-3 as well as MRP-2 and MRP-3. However, comparably weak cytotoxic activities were additionally observed against HLA-A2.1+ tumor cells even after upregulation of MDR protein expression by in vitro chemotherapy.
Taken together, these data demonstrate that human T cells can be sensitised towards MDPs and hence, there is no absolute immunological tolerance. However, our data also hint towards rather low endogenous tumor cell processing and presentation of MDPs in the context of HLA-A2.1 molecules. Consequently, we conclude that MDR and MRP proteins must be considered as weak tumor specific antigens-at least for colorectal carcinoma. Their direct contribution to therapy-failure implies however, that it is worth to further pursue this approach.
多药耐药(MDR)是一种具有临床重要意义的现象。在化疗过程中,许多肿瘤对应用的物质(以及在一定程度上对其他药物)表现出越来越强的耐药性。这种现象的一个重要分子原因是转运蛋白的表达增加。这些 MDR 和 MRP(多药耐药相关蛋白)蛋白高表达水平与化疗耐药之间的功能关系使它们成为有前途的治疗靶点。我们在这里想系统地分析这些蛋白是否是可以免疫靶向的肿瘤特异性抗原。
使用反向免疫学法,选择了 30 个 HLA-A2.1 限制的 MDR 和 MRP 衍生肽(MDP)。刺激的 T 细胞系生长良好,主要含有激活的 CD8+细胞。通过 IFN-γ-ELISpot 分析和针对负载 MDP 的靶细胞的细胞毒性试验证明了肽特异性和 HLA-A2.1 限制,总共针对源自 MDR-1、MDR-3、MRP-1、MRP-2、MRP-3 和 MRP-5 的 12 个肽。值得注意的是,这两个表位在 MDR-1 和 MDR-3 以及 MRP-2 和 MRP-3 之间是共享的。然而,即使在体外化疗上调 MDR 蛋白表达后,针对 HLA-A2.1+肿瘤细胞也观察到相对较弱的细胞毒性活性。
总之,这些数据表明,人类 T 细胞可以对 MDP 产生敏感性,因此不存在绝对的免疫耐受。然而,我们的数据也暗示,在 HLA-A2.1 分子的背景下,内源性肿瘤细胞对 MDP 的加工和呈递相当低。因此,我们得出结论,MDR 和 MRP 蛋白必须被视为弱的肿瘤特异性抗原-至少对于结直肠癌是如此。它们对治疗失败的直接贡献意味着,进一步探索这种方法是值得的。