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Point Mutation in Essential Genes with Loss or Mutation of the Second Allele: Relevance to the Retention of Tumor-Specific Antigens

Antigens that are tumor specific yet retained by tumor cells despite tumor progression offer stable and specific targets for immunologic and possibly other therapeutic interventions. Therefore, we have studied two CD4(+) T cell–recognized tumor-specific antigens that were retained during evolution o...

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Autores principales: Beck-Engeser, Gabriele B., Monach, Paul A., Mumberg, Dominik, Yang, Farley, Wanderling, Sherry, Schreiber, Karin, Espinosa, Rafael, Le Beau, Michelle M., Meredith, Stephen C., Schreiber, Hans
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2193475/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11489948
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author Beck-Engeser, Gabriele B.
Monach, Paul A.
Mumberg, Dominik
Yang, Farley
Wanderling, Sherry
Schreiber, Karin
Espinosa, Rafael
Le Beau, Michelle M.
Meredith, Stephen C.
Schreiber, Hans
author_facet Beck-Engeser, Gabriele B.
Monach, Paul A.
Mumberg, Dominik
Yang, Farley
Wanderling, Sherry
Schreiber, Karin
Espinosa, Rafael
Le Beau, Michelle M.
Meredith, Stephen C.
Schreiber, Hans
author_sort Beck-Engeser, Gabriele B.
collection PubMed
description Antigens that are tumor specific yet retained by tumor cells despite tumor progression offer stable and specific targets for immunologic and possibly other therapeutic interventions. Therefore, we have studied two CD4(+) T cell–recognized tumor-specific antigens that were retained during evolution of two ultraviolet-light–induced murine cancers to more aggressive growth. The antigens are ribosomal proteins altered by somatic tumor-specific point mutations, and the progressor (PRO) variants lack the corresponding normal alleles. In the first tumor, 6132A-PRO, the antigen is encoded by a point-mutated L9 ribosomal protein gene. The tumor lacks the normal L9 allele because of an interstitial deletion from chromosome 5. In the second tumor, 6139B-PRO, both alleles of the L26 gene have point mutations, and each encodes a different tumor-specific CD4(+) T cell–recognized antigen. Thus, for both L9 and L26 genes, we observe “two hit” kinetics commonly observed in genes suppressing tumor growth. Indeed, reintroduction of the lost wild-type L9 allele into the 6132A-PRO variant suppressed the growth of the tumor cells in vivo. Since both L9 and L26 encode proteins essential for ribosomal biogenesis, complete loss of the tumor-specific target antigens in the absence of a normal allele would abrogate tumor growth.
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spelling pubmed-21934752008-04-14 Point Mutation in Essential Genes with Loss or Mutation of the Second Allele: Relevance to the Retention of Tumor-Specific Antigens Beck-Engeser, Gabriele B. Monach, Paul A. Mumberg, Dominik Yang, Farley Wanderling, Sherry Schreiber, Karin Espinosa, Rafael Le Beau, Michelle M. Meredith, Stephen C. Schreiber, Hans J Exp Med Original Article Antigens that are tumor specific yet retained by tumor cells despite tumor progression offer stable and specific targets for immunologic and possibly other therapeutic interventions. Therefore, we have studied two CD4(+) T cell–recognized tumor-specific antigens that were retained during evolution of two ultraviolet-light–induced murine cancers to more aggressive growth. The antigens are ribosomal proteins altered by somatic tumor-specific point mutations, and the progressor (PRO) variants lack the corresponding normal alleles. In the first tumor, 6132A-PRO, the antigen is encoded by a point-mutated L9 ribosomal protein gene. The tumor lacks the normal L9 allele because of an interstitial deletion from chromosome 5. In the second tumor, 6139B-PRO, both alleles of the L26 gene have point mutations, and each encodes a different tumor-specific CD4(+) T cell–recognized antigen. Thus, for both L9 and L26 genes, we observe “two hit” kinetics commonly observed in genes suppressing tumor growth. Indeed, reintroduction of the lost wild-type L9 allele into the 6132A-PRO variant suppressed the growth of the tumor cells in vivo. Since both L9 and L26 encode proteins essential for ribosomal biogenesis, complete loss of the tumor-specific target antigens in the absence of a normal allele would abrogate tumor growth. The Rockefeller University Press 2001-08-06 /pmc/articles/PMC2193475/ /pubmed/11489948 Text en © 2001 The Rockefeller University Press This article is distributed under the terms of an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike–No Mirror Sites license for the first six months after the publication date (see http://www.rupress.org/terms). After six months it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 4.0 Unported license, as described at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Article
Beck-Engeser, Gabriele B.
Monach, Paul A.
Mumberg, Dominik
Yang, Farley
Wanderling, Sherry
Schreiber, Karin
Espinosa, Rafael
Le Beau, Michelle M.
Meredith, Stephen C.
Schreiber, Hans
Point Mutation in Essential Genes with Loss or Mutation of the Second Allele: Relevance to the Retention of Tumor-Specific Antigens
title Point Mutation in Essential Genes with Loss or Mutation of the Second Allele: Relevance to the Retention of Tumor-Specific Antigens
title_full Point Mutation in Essential Genes with Loss or Mutation of the Second Allele: Relevance to the Retention of Tumor-Specific Antigens
title_fullStr Point Mutation in Essential Genes with Loss or Mutation of the Second Allele: Relevance to the Retention of Tumor-Specific Antigens
title_full_unstemmed Point Mutation in Essential Genes with Loss or Mutation of the Second Allele: Relevance to the Retention of Tumor-Specific Antigens
title_short Point Mutation in Essential Genes with Loss or Mutation of the Second Allele: Relevance to the Retention of Tumor-Specific Antigens
title_sort point mutation in essential genes with loss or mutation of the second allele: relevance to the retention of tumor-specific antigens
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2193475/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11489948
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