Lessons to be learned from primary renal cell carcinomas: novel tumor antigens and HLA ligands for immunotherapy

T Krüger, O Schoor, C Lemmel, B Kraemer… - Cancer Immunology …, 2005 - Springer
T Krüger, O Schoor, C Lemmel, B Kraemer, C Reichle, J Dengjel, T Weinschenk, M Müller…
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy, 2005Springer
The lack of sufficient well-defined tumor-associated antigens is still a drawback on the way
to a cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-based immunotherapy of renal cell carcinoma (RCC). We are
trying to define a larger number of such targets by a combined approach involving HLA
ligand characterization by mass spectrometry and gene expression profiling by
oligonucleotide microarrays. Here, we present the results of a large-scale analysis of 13
RCC specimens. We were able to identify more than 700 peptides, mostly from self-proteins …
Abstract
The lack of sufficient well-defined tumor-associated antigens is still a drawback on the way to a cytotoxic T-lymphocyte-based immunotherapy of renal cell carcinoma (RCC). We are trying to define a larger number of such targets by a combined approach involving HLA ligand characterization by mass spectrometry and gene expression profiling by oligonucleotide microarrays. Here, we present the results of a large-scale analysis of 13 RCC specimens. We were able to identify more than 700 peptides, mostly from self-proteins without any evident tumor association. However, some HLA ligands derived from previously known tumor antigens in RCC. In addition, gene expression profiling of tumors and a set of healthy tissues revealed novel candidate RCC-associated antigens. For several of them, we were able to characterize HLA ligands after extraction from the tumor tissue. Apart from universal RCC antigens, some proteins seem to be appropriate candidates in individual patients only. This underlines the advantage of a personalized therapeutic approach. Further analyses will contribute additional HLA ligands to this repertoire of universal as well as patient-individual tumor antigens.
Springer