Clinical and Developmental Immunology (Jan 2011)

Patients with Multiple Myeloma Develop SOX2-Specific Autoantibodies after Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplantation

  • Sebastian Kobold,
  • Sinje Tams,
  • Tim Luetkens,
  • Yanran Cao,
  • Orhan Sezer,
  • Britta Marlen Bartels,
  • Henrike Reinhard,
  • Julia Templin,
  • Katrin Bartels,
  • York Hildebrandt,
  • Nesrine Lajmi,
  • Andreas Marx,
  • Friedrich Haag,
  • Carsten Bokemeyer,
  • Nicolaus Kröger,
  • Djordje Atanackovic

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2011/302145
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2011

Abstract

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The occurrence of SOX2-specific autoantibodies seems to be associated with an improved prognosis in patients with monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance (MGUS). However, it is unclear if SOX2-specific antibodies also develop in established multiple myeloma (MM). Screening 1094 peripheral blood (PB) sera from 196 MM patients and 100 PB sera from healthy donors, we detected SOX2-specific autoantibodies in 7.7% and 2.0% of patients and donors, respectively. We identified SOX2211–230 as an immunodominant antibody-epitope within the full protein sequence. SOX2 antigen was expressed in most healthy tissues and its expression did not correlate with the number of BM-resident plasma cells. Accordingly, anti-SOX2 immunity was not related to SOX2 expression levels or tumor burden in the patients’ BM. The only clinical factor predicting the development of anti-SOX2 immunity was application of allogeneic stem cell transplantation (alloSCT). Anti-SOX2 antibodies occurred more frequently in patients who had received alloSCT (n=74). Moreover, most SOX2-seropositive patients had only developed antibodies after alloSCT. This finding indicates that alloSCT is able to break tolerance towards this commonly expressed antigen. The questions whether SOX2-specific autoantibodies merely represent an epiphenomenon, are related to graft-versus-host effects or participate in the immune control of myeloma needs to be answered in prospective studies.