Epithelial polarization modulates gene expression. The transcription factor zonula occludens 1 (ZO-1)-associated nucleic acid binding protein (ZONAB) can shuttle between tight junctions and nuclei, promoting cell proliferation and expression of cyclin D1 and proliferating cell nuclear antigen (PCNA), but whether it also represses epithelial differentiation is unknown. Here, during mouse kidney ontogeny and polarization of proximal tubular cells (OK cells), ZONAB and PCNA levels decreased in parallel and inversely correlated with increasing apical differentiation, reflected by expression of megalin/cubilin, maturation of the brush border, and extension of the primary cilium. Conversely, ZONAB reexpression and loss of apical differentiation markers provided a signature for renal clear cell carcinoma. In confluent OK cells, ZONAB overexpression increased proliferation and PCNA while repressing megalin/cubilin expression and impairing differentiation of the brush border and primary cilium. Reporter and chromatin immunoprecipitation assays demonstrated that megalin and cubilin are ZONAB target genes. Sparsely plated OK cells formed small islands composed of distinct populations: Cells on the periphery, which lacked external tight junctions, strongly expressed nuclear ZONAB, proliferated, and failed to differentiate; central cells, surrounded by continuous junctions, lost nuclear ZONAB, stopped proliferating, and engaged in apical differentiation. Taken together, these data suggest that ZONAB is an important component of the mechanisms that sense epithelial density and participates in the complex transcriptional networks that regulate the switch between proliferation and differentiation.
Invariant NKT cells (iNKT cells) recognize glycolipid Ags via an invariant TCR α-chain and play a central role in various immune responses. Although human CD4+ and CD4− iNKT cell subsets both produce Th1 cytokines, the CD4+ subset displays an enhanced ability to secrete Th2 cytokines and shows regulatory activity. We performed an ex vivo analysis of blood, liver, and tumor iNKT cells from patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and metastases from uveal melanoma or colon carcinoma. Frequencies of Vα24/Vβ11 iNKT cells were increased in tumors, especially in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma. The proportions of CD4+, double negative, and CD8α+ iNKT cell subsets in the blood of patients were similar to those of healthy donors. However, we consistently found that the proportion of CD4+ iNKT cells increased gradually from blood to liver to tumor. Furthermore, CD4+ iNKT cell clones generated from healthy donors were functionally distinct from their CD4− counterparts, exhibiting higher Th2 cytokine production and lower cytolytic activity. Thus, in the tumor microenvironment the iNKT cell repertoire is modified by the enrichment of CD4+ iNKT cells, a subset able to generate Th2 cytokines that can inhibit the expansion of tumor Ag-specific CD8+ T cells. Because CD4+ iNKT cells appear inefficient in tumor defense and may even favor tumor growth and recurrence, novel iNKT-targeted therapies should restore CD4− iNKT cells at the tumor site and specifically induce Th1 cytokine production from all iNKT cell subsets.
Tolerance to tumor-nonmutated self proteins represents a major obstacle for successful cancer immunotherapy. Since this tolerance primarily concerns dominant epitopes, we hypothesized that targeting cryptic epitopes that have a low affinity for HLA could be an efficient strategy to breach the tolerance to tumor Ags. Using the P1Y heteroclitic peptide approach, we identified low affinity cryptic HLA-A*0201-restricted epitopes derived from two widely expressed tumor Ags, HER-2/neu and hTERT. The P1Y variants of four HER-2/neu (neu391, neu402, neu466, neu650)- and two hTERT (hTERT572 and hTERT988)-derived low affinity peptides exhibited strong affinity for HLA-A*0201 and stimulated specific CTL from healthy donor PBMCs. These CTL specifically recognized HER-2/neu- and hTERT-expressing tumor cells of various histological origins. In vivo studies showed that HLA-A*0201 transgenic HHD mice vaccinated with the P1Y variant peptides generated CTL that specifically lysed Ag-expressing tumor cells, thus recognizing the cognate endogenous Ags. These results suggest that heteroclitic variants of low affinity, cryptic epitopes of widely expressed tumor Ags may serve as valid tools for tumor immunotherapy.
Most of the human tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) characterized thus far are derived from nonmutated "self"-proteins. Numerous strategies have been developed to break tolerance to TAAs, combining various forms of antigens with different vectors and adjuvants. However, no study has yet determined how to select epitopes within a given TAA to induce the highest antitumor effector response. We addressed this question by evaluating in HLA-A*0201-transgenic HHD mice the antitumor vaccination efficacy of high-and low-affinity epitopes from the naturally expressed murine telomerase reverse transcriptase (mTERT). Immunity against low-affinity epitopes was induced with heteroclitical variants. We show here that the CTL repertoire against high-affinity epitopes is partially tolerized, while that against low-affinity epitopes is composed of frequent CTLs with high avidity. The highaffinity p797 and p545 mTERT epitopes are not able to protect mice from a lethal challenge with the mTERT-expressing EL4-HHD tumor. In contrast, mice developing CTL responses against the p572 and p988 low-affinity epitopes exhibit potent antitumor immunity and no sign of autoimmune reactivity against TERT-expressing normal tissues. Our results strongly argue for new TAA epitope selection and modification strategies in antitumor immunotherapy applications in humans.
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