4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Oncoantigens as anti-tumor vaccination targets: the chance of a lucky strike?

Journal

CANCER IMMUNOLOGY IMMUNOTHERAPY
Volume 57, Issue 11, Pages 1685-1694

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00262-008-0481-x

Keywords

tumor antigens; vaccination; immunotherapy

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Neoplastic transformation is a multistage process and distinct gene products of specific cell regulatory pathways are involved at each stage. Identification of genes overexpressed at a specific stage provides an unprecedented opportunity to address the immune system against antigens with a driving role in tumor progression (oncoantigens). The ERBB2 oncogene is a prototype of deregulated oncogenic protein kinase membrane receptors. Mice transgenic for rat ERBB2 (BALB-neuT mice) were used in this study to identify an additional set of oncoantigens expressed at defined stages by most breast carcinomas to be used as alternatives to ERBB2-driven vaccination. To address this question, we integrated the transcription data generated by comparing preneoplastic lesions and neoplasia in BALB-neuT mice with a meta-analysis on transcription profiles generated from normal and breast tumor human specimens. Forty-six putative oncoantigens identified and prioritized according to their expression on the cell membrane or in the extra cellular space, cytoplasm and nucleus were chosen for preclinical investigation as vaccination targets.

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