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Monitoring of anti-vaccine CD4 T cell frequencies in melanoma patients vaccinated with a MAGE-3 protein

  • Yi Zhang
  • , Zhaojun Sun
  • , Hugues Nicolay
  • , Ralf G. Meyer
  • , Nicolina Renkvist
  • , Vincent Stroobant
  • , Jurgen Corthals
  • , Javier Carrasco
  • , Alexander M.M. Eggermont
  • , Marie Marchand
  • , Kris Thielemans
  • , Thomas Wölfel
  • , Thierry Boon
  • , Pierre Van Der Bruggen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

32 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Quantitative evaluation of T cell responses of patients receiving antitumoral vaccination with a protein is difficult because of the large number of possible HLA-peptide combinations that could be targeted by the response. To evaluate the responses of patients vaccinated with protein MAGE-3, we have developed an approach that involves overnight stimulation of blood T cells with autologous dendritic cells loaded with the protein, sorting by flow cytometry of the T cells that produce IFN-γ, cloning of these cells, and evaluation of the number of T cell clones that secrete IFN-γ upon stimulation with the Ag. An important criterion is that T cell clones must recognize not only stimulator cells loaded with the protein, but also stimulator cells transduced with the MAGE-3 gene, so as to exclude the T cells that recognize contaminants generated by the protein production system. Using this approach it is possible to measure T cell frequencies as low as 10-6. We analyzed the frequencies of anti-vaccine CD4 T cells in five metastatic melanoma patients who had been injected with a MAGE-3 protein without adjuvant and showed evidence of tumor regression. Anti-MAGE-3 CD4 T cells were detected in one of the five patients. The frequency of the anti-MAGE-3 CD4 T cells was estimated at 1/60,000 of the CD4 T cells in postvaccination blood samples, representing at least an 80-fold increase in the frequency found before immunization. The frequencies of one anti-MAGE-3 CD4 T cell clonotype were confirmed by PCR analysis on blood lymphocytes. The 13 anti-MAGE-3 clones, which corresponded to five different TCR clonotypes, recognized the same peptide presented by HLA-DR1.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2404-2411
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Immunology
Volume174
Issue number4
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Feb 2005
Externally publishedYes

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