Abstract
Melanoma and renal cell carcinoma (RCC) are thought to be the most immunogenic human tumors. Presently a series of tumor-specific peptides of melanoma is being tested in clinical trials with different immunotherapy protocols. In contrast, only one decameric peptide (SPSSNRIRNT) derived from one (ORF2) of three possible open reading frames (ORFs) of a gene named RAGE (Renal tumor AntiGEn) was shown to be the target for tumor-specific CTLs on renal carcinoma cells. One reason for the lack of identification of tumor antigens on RCC compared with melanoma may be the difficulty in generating tumor-specific CTLs as screening instruments. Therefore, our approach was directly to isolate and identify peptides bound to HLA class I molecules of the HLA-A2 and -B8 homozygous RCC line A-498. High performance liquid chromatography-fractionated peptides eluted with acid from immunoaffinity-purified HLA class I-peptide complexes were sequenced and identified for the first time by the novel and highly sensitive mass spectrometric method matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-post source decay (MALDI-PSD) from minute amounts of 100 fmol to 1.5 pmol of the fractionated peptide samples. Fourteen peptide sequences first deduced from interpretations of the mass spectra were also shown to fulfill other reliability criteria such as matching the mass spectra of the respective synthetic peptides. Some peptides were identified to be derived from genes preferentially activated in malignant tissues or resulted from a possibly mutated gene. The most promising candidate for a CTL epitope is a decameric peptide (PASKKTDPQK) derived from another possible ORF (ORF5) of the RAGE gene and probably presented in association with HLA-B8. This peptide was synthesized and used for the in vitro induction of CTLs that lysed the A-498 cells and another HLA-B8-positive RCC line significantly more strongly than either other RAGE-positive but HLA-B8-negative RCC lines or K562 cells. Sensitive sequencing by MALDI-PSD thus may provide a powerful method of identifying potentially tumor-specific and HLA-restricted antigens, even on native malignant cells and tissues.
Footnotes
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↵1 This work was partially supported by the “Fortune” Program 128.2093.1/2 of the Medical Faculty of the University of Tuebingen, by the Medical Faculty of the University of Duesseldorf, by the German Ministry for Education, Science, Research, and Technology (BMBF, Contract 0310709), by the European Union (Contract MAT1-CT94-0034), by the German Ministry for Science and Research of Nordrhein-Westfalen, and by a grant from Thermo Bioanalysis, Ltd., Hemel Hempstead, United Kingdom.
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↵2 To whom requests for reprints should be addressed, at Medical University Clinic, Department II, Section of Transplantation Immunology and Immunohematology, Otfried-Müller-Strasse-10, D-72076 Tübingen, Germany. Fax: 49-7071-295755; E-mail: claudia.mueller@med.uni-tuebingen.de.
- Received June 19, 1998.
- Accepted October 16, 1998.
- ©1998 American Association for Cancer Research.