Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2088925 Journal of Immunological Methods 2008 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

There is a need for earlier and more accurate cancer diagnostics as well as new targets for cancer immunotherapy. To this end, it is important to identify sets of tumour antigens specific for different cancer forms. Several methods that identify potential tumour antigens in an arrayed and high-throughput format have been developed during the last years of SEREX (serological identification of antigens by recombinant expression cloning) related research. Such techniques may hold the potential to describe the complete immunogenic part of the cancer proteome, also called the cancer immunoproteome.We have developed a powerful platform for automated serological high-throughput filter screening of tumour cDNA libraries. The screening format of this method is 18,000 single cDNAs clones, which is superior to other high-throughput methods described. The output is antigens, which are potential diagnostic cancer markers and vaccine targets. We present here the results from the screening of a prostate tumour cDNA library with autologous patient antibodies.We first demonstrated the feasibility of the automated high-throughput filter immunoscreening method by use of the NY-ESO-1sv (NY-ESO-1 splice variant) antigen. We then screened 18,000 cDNA clones from a phage display selected prostate tumour cDNA library with autologous patient antibodies and identified several relevant antigens such as NY-ESO-1, XAGE-1, DJ-1 and transcription factor 25 (TCF25).The present high-throughput immunoscreening method has the potential to identify both patient-specific and disease-specific antigens for use in diagnostics and therapy.

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