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Tolerance and immunity to MUC1 in a human MUC1 transgenic murine model

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TLDR
Data suggest that endogenous expression of MUC1 protein by M UC1 transgenic mice induces T-cell tolerance to stimulation by MUC2, and will facilitate the investigation of anti-MUC1 immunotherapy formulations.
Abstract
The human epithelial mucin, MUC1, is a large transmembrane glycoprotein that is expressed on most simple epithelia. It is overexpressed and aberrantly glycosylated on many human epithelial tumors, including more than 90% of human breast cancers. MUC1 is of interest as an immunotherapy target because patients with breast, ovarian, and pancreatic cancers have T lymphocytes in their tumor-draining lymph nodes that can be induced to recognize and lyse MUC1-expressing tumor cells. We have produced a transgenic mouse model that expresses the human MUC1 molecule on an inbred C57Bl/6 background to investigate the effect of endogenous expression of MUC1 on the ability of mice to generate antitumor immunity to MUC1-expressing tumors. Transgenic mice expressed the human transgene in a pattern and level consistent with that observed in humans. Transgenic mice were tolerant to stimulation by MUC1 as evidenced by the ability of MUC1-expressing tumor cells to grow in these mice, whereas MUC1-expressing cells were eliminated from wild-type mice. Moreover, transgenic mice immunized with MUC1 peptides failed to exhibit immunoglobulin class switching to the IgG subtypes. These data suggest that endogenous expression of MUC1 protein by MUC1 transgenic mice induces T-cell tolerance to stimulation by MUC1. The transgenic mice will provide a useful model to investigate the mechanisms that regulate immunological tolerance to tumor antigens and will facilitate the investigation of anti-MUC1 immunotherapy formulations.

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Journal ArticleDOI

MUC1, the renaissance molecule.

TL;DR: Recent discoveries that suggest that MUC1 may be a multifunctional protein, located on the surfaces of cells as a sensor of the environment, poised to signal to the interior when things go awry are highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

MUC1 and cancer

TL;DR: The MUC1 membrane mucin was first identified as the molecule recognised by mouse monoclonal antibodies directed to epithelial cells, and the cancers which develop from them, and its role in the immune response and in other interactions with the effector cells of the immune system is of particular interest.
Journal ArticleDOI

Immune recognition of tumor-associated mucin MUC1 is achieved by a fully synthetic aberrantly glycosylated MUC1 tripartite vaccine

TL;DR: The minimum requirements to consistently induce CTLs and ADCC-mediating antibodies specific for the tumor form of MUC1 are identified resulting in a therapeutic response in a mouse model of mammary cancer.
Journal ArticleDOI

Chemoenzymatically synthesized multimeric Tn/STn MUC1 glycopeptides elicit cancer-specific anti-MUC1 antibody responses and override tolerance.

TL;DR: Chemoenzymatic synthesis of extended MUC1 TR glycopeptides with cancer-associated O-glycosylation using a panel of recombinant human glycosyltransferases is developed and a MAb with similar specificity as the elicited immune response was generated and shown to have the same remarkable cancer specificity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reversal of tolerance to human MUC1 antigen in MUC1 transgenic mice immunized with fusions of dendritic and carcinoma cells

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that unresponsiveness to the M UC1 tumor-associated antigen is reversible by immunization with heterokaryons of dendritic cells and MUC1-positive carcinoma cells.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

MUC1-C activates the TAK1 inflammatory pathway in colon cancer.

TL;DR: The present studies demonstrate that the MUC1-C transmembrane subunit induces TAK1 expression in colon cancer cells and support a model in which MUC2-C-induced TAK2-mediated NF-κB signaling contributes to intestinal inflammation and colon cancer progression.
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Enhanced Immunogenicity of Heat Shock Protein 70 Peptide Complexes from Dendritic Cell-Tumor Fusion Cells

TL;DR: These experiments indicate that HSP70-peptide complexes (PC) derived from DC-tumor fusion cells have increased their immunogenicity and therefore constitute an improved formulation of chaperone protein-based tumor vaccine.
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Expression of Tumor-Associated Differentiation Antigens, MUC1 Glycoforms and CEA, in Human Thymic Epithelial Cells: Implications for Self-Tolerance and Tumor Therapy

TL;DR: The findings imply that MUC1 and CEA are amenable to central tolerance induction, which might, however, be incomplete in case of tumor cell-restricted MUC2 glycoforms, and knowledge of these subtleties in promiscuous gene expression may assist the selection of T cell tumor vaccines for clinical trials.
Journal Article

Murine Immune Response to Cells Transfected with Human MUC1: Immunization with Cellular and Synthetic Antigens

TL;DR: CD8+ cytotoxic anti-mucin cells can produce significant antitumor responses in vivo to a human "tumor" antigen expressed in murine cells; immunization with soluble synthetic or native materials leads to the "humoral" (TH2) type of immunity, and efforts need to be made to convert this to a TH1-type response.
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Prevention of Spontaneous Breast Carcinoma by Prophylactic Vaccination with Dendritic/Tumor Fusion Cells

TL;DR: It is indicated that prophylactic vaccination with dendritic/tumor fusion cells confers sufficient antitumor immunity to counter the tumorigenesis of potent oncogenic products.