Scientific Reports (Jun 2023)

Successful targeting in situ of an oncogenic nuclear antigen by hapten induced tumor associated autoantibodies (iTAA)

  • Baofa Yu,
  • Jian Zhang,
  • Qiang Fu,
  • Yan Han,
  • Jie Zhang,
  • Feng Gao,
  • Peng Jing,
  • Peicheng Zhang,
  • Guoqin Zheng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-36757-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 23

Abstract

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Abstract The abscopal is a hypothesis for treating of non-irradiated tumors after localized radiation therapy. It is associated with the products of tumor-associated gene as autoantibodies (aTAAs) in reaction to the tumor-associated antigens (TAAs), with increasing of anti-MAGEA3 and an relationship between the abscopal effect and immune response. The hapten enhanced local chemotherapy (HELC) was studied to kills tumor and release tumor TAAs, then hapten modify the TAAs to neu-TAAs, to produce tumor autologous antibodies, called induced tumor-associated autoantibodies (iTAAs) that is different from natural TAAs. Since the iTAAs and complement (C) are associated with cancer therapy Immunofluorescence (IF) was applied to evaluate the expression of the iTAAs and C3, C5, C9. Traces resulted in a partial staining of the nucleus in C3’s perinuclear reaction. The iTTAs of Survivin, C-MYC, and IMP1 increased significantly in the tumor cells' intranuclear regions (P = 0.02, P = 0.00, P < 0.0001). Koc, zeta, RalA, and p53 had a similar trend in the perinuclear regions (P < 0.0001, P = 0.004, P < 0.0001, P = 0.003). Therefore, we can propose that tumor antigens inside the cancer cells’ nuclei are targeted by the iTAAs since the iTAAs binding levels are higher after HELC. The iTAA tagging oncogenic nuclear antigens may play a distinctive role in regulating tumor cell growth.