gp100 (457-466)
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gp100 (457-466)

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Gp100 (457-466) is a peptide derived from Melanocyte Protein PMEL 17, a 100 kDa type I transmembrane glycoprotein that is expressed primarily in pigment cells of the skin and eye.

Category
Others
Catalog number
BAT-009610
Synonyms
Melanocyte Protein PMEL 17 (457-466)
Sequence
LLDGTATLRL
Storage
Common storage 2-8°C, long time storage -20°C.
1. Identification of a novel peptide derived from the melanocyte-specific gp100 antigen as the dominant epitope recognized by an HLA-A2.1-restricted anti-melanoma CTL line
A B Bakker, M W Schreurs, G Tafazzul, A J de Boer, Y Kawakami, G J Adema, C G Figdor Int J Cancer. 1995 Jul 4;62(1):97-102. doi: 10.1002/ijc.2910620118.
Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) reactive with human melanoma tumor cells occasionally display cross-reactivity with normal melanocytes. Previously, we identified the melanocyte lineage-specific antigen gp 100 that is expressed by both melanoma cells and normal melanocytes, as a target antigen for tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes derived from a melanoma patient (TIL 1200). Here, we demonstrate that the oligoclonal HLA-A2.1-restricted TIL 1200 line is reactive with 2 distinct peptides derived from the gp 100 protein. Apart from the peptide corresponding to gp 100 amino acids 457-466, we identified the gp 100 peptide 154-162 as a second epitope recognized by TIL 1200. A 100-fold lower concentration of this novel gp 100 peptide was required for target-cell sensitization compared to peptide 457-466, indicating that the 154-162 peptide is the dominant gp 100 epitope for TIL 1200. Together with the recently described gp 100 280-288 epitope, 3 distinct CTL epitopes have now been identified in gp 100, all presented in the context of HLA-A2.1. Therefore, gp 100 is an attractive target antigen in the development of immuno-therapeutic protocols against melanoma.
2. Limited antitumor T cell response in melanoma patients vaccinated with interleukin-2 gene-transduced allogeneic melanoma cells
F Arienti, J Sulé-Suso, F Belli, L Mascheroni, L Rivoltini, C Melani, M Maio, N Cascinelli, M P Colombo, G Parmiani Hum Gene Ther. 1996 Oct 20;7(16):1955-63. doi: 10.1089/hum.1996.7.16-1955.
We have immunized advanced melanoma patients with a HLA-A2-compatible human melanoma line genetically modified to release interleukin-2 (IL-2), to elicit or increase a T cell-mediated anti-melanoma response that may affect distant lesions. Twelve stage-IV patients were injected subcutaneously at days 1, 13, 26, and 55 with IL-2 gene-transduced and irradiated melanoma cells at doses of 5 or 15 x 10(7) cells. Both local and systemic toxicities were mild, consisting of transient erythema at the vaccination site; fever occurred in a minority of patients. Three mixed responses were recorded. Seven patients were evaluable for immunological studies. Mixed tumor-lymphocyte cultures carried out with different allogeneic HLA-A2-matched melanoma lines as stimulators and targets revealed an increase in the MHC-unrestricted, but no changes in the MHC-restricted, cytotoxicity in peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) obtained after vaccination as compared with those obtained before vaccination. Increased recognition of the tyrosinase 368-376 peptide occurred in post-vaccination PBL of one patient, whereas a weak increase in recognition of the gp100 280-288 peptide was detectable in another patient; these 2 patients also recognized the gp100 457-466 peptide. After in vitro, stimulation with the only available autologous melanoma line, CD4+ cells with autologous tumor-specific cytotoxicity and ability to release interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) were found in post- but not in pre-vaccination PBL. In the same patient, as well as in another patient, limiting dilution analysis showed that vaccination resulted in an increased frequency of melanoma-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) precursors. These results indicate that vaccination with cells releasing IL-2 locally can expand a T cell response against antigen(s) of autologous, untransduced tumor, although this response occurred in a minority of the melanoma patients studied.
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