Tk, a new colon tumor-associated antigen resulting from altered O-glycosylation.
Erythrocyte polyagglutination antigens T and Tn are truncated O-glycan chains that are also carcinoma-associated antigens. We investigated whether Tk polyagglutination antigen could similarly be a carcinoma-associated marker and a target of immunotherapy. Monoclonal antibody LM389 was raised against Tk erythrocytes and tested by immunohistochemistry. LM389 strongly reacted with 48% human colorectal carcinomas. Labeling of normal tissues was visible on epithelial cells, mainly digestive, but was confined at a supranuclear level. Expression of the antigen on cloned human carcinoma cells correlated with sialosyl-Tn expression. O-Sialoglycoprotein endopeptidase treatment revealed that on carcinomas and cell lines, the epitope was present on O-glycans. Antibody specificity was determined using synthetic carbohydrates. Direct binding and inhibition studies indicated that LM389 best ligands were terminated by two branched N-acetylglucosamine units. Screening of murine cellular cell lines with LM389 allowed development of an experimental model with Tk-positive and -negative cells in syngeneic BDIX rats. Vaccination of rats with Tk erythrocytes provided a protection against growth of rat Tk-positive, but not of Tk-negative, tumor cells in association with the development of antibodies. Taken together, the results indicate that Tk polyagglutination antigen is a new colorectal carcinoma-associated antigen, absent from the normal cell surface, resulting from alteration of O-glycans biosynthesis and with potential as a target of immunotherapy.[1]References
- Tk, a new colon tumor-associated antigen resulting from altered O-glycosylation. Meichenin, M., Rocher, J., Galanina, O., Bovin, N., Nifantev, N., Sherman, A., Cassagnau, E., Heymann, M.F., Bara, J., Fraser, R.H., Le Pendu, J. Cancer Res. (2000) [Pubmed]
Annotations and hyperlinks in this abstract are from individual authors of WikiGenes or automatically generated by the WikiGenes Data Mining Engine. The abstract is from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.About WikiGenesOpen Access LicencePrivacy PolicyTerms of Useapsburg