Chronic myeloid leukemia cells express tumor-associated antigens eliciting specific CD8+ T-cell responses and are lacking costimulatory molecules.

Journal: Experimental Hematology
Published:
Abstract

Specific immunotherapies for patients with chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) might eliminate residual CML cells after therapy with imatinib or chemotherapy and might enhance a specific graft-versus-leukemia effect after allogeneic stem cell transplantation. Here, we investigated the mRNA expression and T-cell recognition of tumor-associated antigens or leukemia-associated antigens (LAAs) in 34 patients with CML. Several LAAs are expressed in CML and therefore are candidate structures for specific immunotherapies: bcr-abl (100%), G250 (24%), hTERT (53%), MPP11 (91%), NEWREN60 (94%), PRAME (62%), Proteinase3 (71%), RHAMM/CD168 (83%), and WT1 (53%), but not BAGE, MAGE-A1, SSX2, or NY-ESO-1. The frequency of mRNA expression of RHAMM/CD168, Proteinase3, and PRAME was higher in acceleration phase and blast crisis. In flow cytometry, CD34+ progenitor cells typed positive for HLA molecules but were deficient for CD40, CD80, CD83, and CD86. However, RHAMM/CD168 R3-peptide (ILSLELMKL)-specific T-cell responses in CML patients were demonstrated by ELISPOT analysis and specific lysis of RHAMM/CD168 R3-pulsed T2 cells and CD34+ CML cells in chromium-51 release assays. RHAMM-R3-specific T cells could be phenotyped as CD8+R3*tetramer+CD45RA+CCR7-CD27- early effector T cells by tetramer staining. Therefore, vaccination strategies inducing such RHAMM-R3-directed effector T cells might be a promising approach to enhance specific immune responses against CML cells.

Authors
Michael Schmitt, Li Li, Krzysztof Giannopoulos, Jinfei Chen, Christian Brunner, Thomas Barth, Anita Schmitt, Markus Wiesneth, Konstanze Döhner, Hartmut Döhner, Jochen Greiner