Immunogenic (tum-) Variants of Mouse Tumor P815: Cloning of the Gene of tum- Antigen P91A and Identification of the tum- Mutation

Mutagen treatment of mouse P815 tumor cells produces tum- variants that are rejected by syngeneic mice because these variants express new surface antigens. These ``tum- antigens'' are recognized by cytolytic T lymphocytes but induce no detectable antibody response. Transfection of P815 cel...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 1988-04, Vol.85 (7), p.2274-2278
Hauptverfasser: De Plaen, Etienne, Lurquin, Christophe, Van Pel, Aline, Mariamé, Bernard, Szikora, Jean-Pierre, Wölfel, Thomas, Sibille, Catherine, Chomez, Patrick, Boon, Thierry
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Mutagen treatment of mouse P815 tumor cells produces tum- variants that are rejected by syngeneic mice because these variants express new surface antigens. These ``tum- antigens'' are recognized by cytolytic T lymphocytes but induce no detectable antibody response. Transfection of P815 cell line P1.HTR with DNA of tum- variant P91 yielded transfectants expressing tum- antigen P91A. They were detected by their ability to stimulate proliferation of cytolytic T lymphocytes [Wolfel, T., Van Pel, A., De Plaen, E., Lurquin, C., Maryanski, J. L. & Boon, T. (1987) Immunogenetics 26, 178-187]. A cosmid library of a cell line expressing antigen P91A was transfected into P1.HTR. Transfectants expressing the antigen were obtained. By packaging directly the DNA of a transfectant with λ phage extracts, we obtained a small cosmid population containing as major component a cosmid that transferred the expression of P91A. The assay of various restriction fragments of this cosmid led to the isolation of an 800-base-pair fragment containing the P91A sequence required for transfection. Comparison with a homologous cDNA showed that this fragment contained only one of the several exons of the P91A gene. The normal and the tum- forms of the gene differ by one nucleotide located in this 137-base-pair exon. The essential role of this mutation, which produces an amino acid change, was confirmed by site-directed mutagenesis. No significant sequence similarity was found between the 800-base-pair fragment and any recorded gene.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.85.7.2274