Journal of Translational Medicine (Nov 2006)

Characterization of highly frequent epitope-specific CD45RA<sup>+</sup>/CCR7<sup>+/- </sup>T lymphocyte responses against p53-binding domains of the human polyomavirus BK large tumor antigen in HLA-A*0201+ BKV-seropositive donors

  • Zajac Paul,
  • Gosert Rainer,
  • Sais Giovanni,
  • Hudolin Tvrtko,
  • Wyler Stephen,
  • Bracci Laura,
  • Provenzano Maurizio,
  • Palu' Giorgio,
  • Heberer Michael,
  • Hirsch Hans H,
  • Spagnoli Giulio C

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-4-47
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
p. 47

Abstract

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Abstract Human polyomavirus BK (BKV) has been implicated in oncogenic transformation. Its ability to replicate is determined by the binding of its large tumor antigen (LTag) to products of tumor-suppressor genes regulating cell cycle, as specifically p53. We investigated CD8+ T immune responses to BKV LTag portions involved in p53 binding in HLA-A*0201+ BKV LTag experienced individuals. Peptides selected from either p53-binding region (LTag351–450 and LTag533–626) by current algorithms and capacity to bind HLA-A*0201 molecule were used to stimulate CD8+ T responses, as assessed by IFN-γ gene expression ex vivo and detected by cytotoxicity assays following in vitro culture. We observed epitope-specific immune responses in all HLA-A*0201+ BKV LTag experienced individuals tested. At least one epitope, LTag579–587; LLLIWFRPV, was naturally processed in non professional antigen presenting cells and induced cytotoxic responses with CTL precursor frequencies in the order of 1/20'000. Antigen specific CD8+ T cells were only detectable in the CD45RA+ subset, in both CCR7+ and CCR7- subpopulations. These data indicate that widespread cellular immune responses against epitopes within BKV LTag-p53 binding regions exist and question their roles in immunosurveillance against tumors possibly associated with BKV infection.