The Journal of Immunology, 1999, 162: 6849-6854.
Copyright © 1999 by The American Association of Immunologists
Cytolytic T Lymphocytes Recognize an Antigen Encoded by MAGE-A10 on a Human Melanoma1
Lan-Qing Huang,
Francis Brasseur,
Alfonso Serrano2,
Etienne De Plaen,
Pierre van der Bruggen,
Thierry Boon and
Aline Van Pel3
Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Brussels Branch, Brussels, Belgium
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Abstract
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From melanoma patient LB1751, cytolytic T lymphocytes (CTL) were
generated that lysed specifically autologous tumor cells. To establish
whether these CTL recognized one of the Ags that had previously been
defined, a CTL clone was stimulated with cells expressing various
MAGE genes. It produced TNF upon stimulation with target
cells expressing MAGE-A10. The Ag was found to be
nonapeptide GLYDGMEHL (codons 254262), which is presented by
HLA-A2.1. This is the first report on the generation of anti-MAGE
CTL by autologous mixed lymphocyte-tumor cell culture (MLTC) from a
melanoma patient other than patient MZ2, from whom the first
MAGE gene was identified. MAGE genes are
expressed in many tumors but not by normal tissues except male germline
cells and placenta, which do not express HLA molecules. Therefore, the
identification of an antigenic peptide derived from
MAGE-A10 adds to the repertoire of tumor-specific shared
Ags available for anti-tumoral vaccination
trials.
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Introduction
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The
identification of tumor Ags is essential for active immunotherapy of
cancers. In recent years intensive efforts have been made in this area,
which has led to the identification of a wealth of Ags recognized on
human tumors by autologous T cells, i.e., T cells obtained from the
same patient (1). Among them, an Ag encoded by gene MAGE-1
was initially defined by cultivating blood lymphocytes of patient MZ2
in the presence of a melanoma cell line derived from this patient. A
panel of cytolytic T lymphocyte
(CTL)4 clones were generated,
one of which recognizes a nonapeptide presented by HLA-A1 (2, 3). It
was found later that MAGE-1 belongs to a family of at least
seventeen related genes, namely MAGE-1 to -12
(now named MAGE-A1 to -A12) (4),
MAGE-B1 to -B4 (5, 6, 7), and MAGE-C1
(8). Genes of this family are expressed in various tumors of different
histological types but are completely silent in normal tissues, with
the exception of male germline cells and placenta (4, 6, 7, 8). Since male
germline cells and placental trophoblast cells do not express MHC class
I molecules (9), gene expression in these tissues should not lead to Ag
expression. This view is supported by the observation that male mice
immunized against an Ag encoded by mouse gene P1A, which has
the same expression pattern as human MAGE genes, produced
strong CTL responses that did not cause testicular inflammation or
alteration of fertility (10). Ags encoded by MAGE genes are,
therefore, highly tumor specific and are consequently suitable
candidates for vaccine-based immunotherapy of cancers.
So far, however, only peptides encoded by MAGE-A1, -A3, and
-A6 have been shown to be recognized by autologous CTL
derived from mixed lymphocyte-tumor cell culture (MLTC), and all these
CTL were generated from only a single patient, namely MZ2 (Refs. 3, 11,
and 12; and P. van der Bruggen, unpublished data). We report here that
CTL from another melanoma patient, LB1751, recognize an Ag that is
encoded by MAGE-A10 and presented by HLA-A2.1.
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Materials and Methods
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Cell lines
Melanoma cell line LB1751-MEL was derived from a
metastatic melanoma in axillary lymph nodes of 67-yr-old male patient
LB1751 and grown by a method previously described (13). At passage 4
after the initiation of LB1751-MEL culture that grew as monolayer,
aggregates of typical EBV-transformed lymphoblastoid cells appeared in
the supernatant. They were collected and cultured separately to obtain
B cell line LB1751-EBV. Melanoma culture LB1751-MEL was cleared of
EBV-transformed B cells by limiting dilution cloning. DNA fingerprint
confirmed that LB1751-MEL and LB1751-EBV originated from the same
patient (data not shown).
Melanoma cell lines LB373-MEL and AVL3-MEL were derived from patients
LB373 and AVL3, respectively, and were cultured in IMDM (Life
Technologies, Gaithersburg, MD) containing 10% FCS. Medullary thyroid
carcinoma cell line TT (ATCC No. CRL-1803) was obtained from the
American Type Culture Collection (ATCC, Manassas, VA) and maintained in
DMEM supplemented with 10% FCS.
CTL clone 447A/5 was generated by MLTC as described previously with
minor modifications (14). Briefly, MLTC was conducted by culturing PBMC
of patient LB1751 with irradiated LB1751-MEL cells in an 8%
CO2 incubator in IMDM supplemented with 10 mM HEPES buffer,
L-arginine (116 µg/ml), L-asparagine (36
µg/ml), L-glutamine (216 µg/ml), 10% human serum, and
5 ng/ml of recombinant human (rh) IL-7 (Genzyme, Cambridge, MA). On day
3, rhIL-2 (Eurocetus, Amsterdam, The Netherlands) was added at a final
concentration of 25 U/ml. Lymphocytes were restimulated weekly with
irradiated LB1751-MEL cells in fresh medium containing 25 U/ml of
rhIL-2 and 5 ng/ml of rhIL-7. On day 21, CD8+ T lymphocytes
were sorted by using anti-CD8-conjugated MACS magnetic MicroBeads
(Miltenyi Biotec, Bergisch Gladbach, Germany) and cloned by limiting
dilution.
Cloning of subgenic fragments of gene MAGE-A10
The 1.1-kb open reading frame (ORF) of MAGE-A10 was
cloned in plasmid vector pcDNAI/Amp (Invitrogen, Oxon, U.K.). Three
fragments containing the first 270, 546, and 825 nucleotides of
MAGE-A10 ORF were amplified by PCR using sense primer
5'-GGAATTCATCATGCCTCGAGCTCCAAAGC-3' and three anti-sense
primers 5'-GCTCTAGAGCTTAGGCTATCTGAGCACTCTG-3',
5'-GCTCTAGAGCTTAGCACTCGGAGGCTTCACT-3', and
5'-GCTCTAGAGCTTACCAATCTTGGGTGAGCAG-3', respectively. For PCR
amplification Pfu DNA polymerase (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA)
was used. A first denaturation step was done for 5 min at 94°C. The
first cycle of amplification was performed for 1 min at 94°C followed
by 1 min at 53°C and 1 min at 72°C, and then 25 additional cycles
were performed as follows: 1 min at 94°C, 1 min at 65°C, and 1 min
at 72°C. Cycling was concluded with a final extension step of 15 min
at 72°C. The PCR products were digested with EcoRI and
XbaI and unidirectionally cloned into the EcoRI
and XbaI sites of plasmid pcDNAI/Amp.
Transfection of COS-7 cells
Transient transfection was performed by the
DEAE-dextran-chloroquine method (15). Briefly, 2 x
104 COS-7 cells were transfected with 100 ng of plasmid
pcDNAI/Amp-A2, a recombinant plasmid containing the HLA-A2.1 cDNA
isolated from a CTL clone of patient SK29 (16), and 100 ng of DNA of
MAGE-A cDNAs or subgenic fragments cloned in pcDNAI/Amp.
Transfected COS-7 cells were tested in a CTL stimulation assay after
48 h.
CTL stimulation assay
Tumor cells and transfectants were tested for their ability to
stimulate the production of TNF by the CTL as described (17). Briefly,
2 x 104 tumor cells were grown for 24 h or
transfected COS-7 cells for 48 h after the transfection. The
medium was discarded, and 3000 CTL were added in 100 µl of medium
supplemented with 10% human serum and 25 U/ml rhIL-2. After 24 h,
the supernatant was collected, and its TNF content was determined by
testing its cytotoxic effect on WEHI 164 clone 13 cells (18) in a MTT
colorimetric assay (17, 19). The concentration (pg/ml) of TNF in the
supernatant was estimated by referring the measured OD to the standard
curve obtained for known concentrations of human rTNF-ß (R&D Systems,
Minneapolis, MN). Inhibition with mAbs W6/32 (anti-HLA class I)
(20), BB7.2 (anti-HLA-A2) (21), and B1.23.2 (anti-HLA-B and -C)
(22) was performed by adding a 1/20 dilution of ascites to the test.
Antigenic peptides and CTL assay
Peptides were synthesized on solid phase using F-moc for
transient NH2-terminal protection and were characterized by
mass spectrometry. All peptides were >90% pure as indicated by
analytical HPLC. Lyophilized peptides were dissolved at 20 mM in DMSO,
diluted to 2 mM with 0.01 M PBS, and stored at -20°C. Lysis of
target cells by CTL was tested by chromium release as previously
described (23). In the peptide sensitization assay, target cells were
51Cr-labeled for 1 h at 37°C and then washed
extensively. Target cells (1000) were incubated in 96-well microplates
in the presence of various concentrations of peptides for 30 min at
37°C. CTL were added at an E:T ratio of 20. Chromium release was
measured after 4 h at 37°C. Enhancement of peptide binding to
the HLA-A2 molecule was achieved by incubation of target cells during
51Cr-labeling with a 1/5 dilution of hybridoma culture
supernatant of mAb MA2.1 (24, 25).
PCR assay for MAGE-A10 expression
RT-PCR was performed to detect the expression of
MAGE-A10 in tumor tissues. Total RNA purification and cDNA
synthesis were conducted as previously described (26). One fortieth of
the cDNA produced from 2 µg of total RNA was amplified using sense
primer 5'-CACAGAGCAGCACTGAAGGAG-3' and anti-sense primer
5'-CTGGGTAAAGACTCACTGTCTGG-3', which yielded a 485-bp specific
fragment of MAGE-A10. For PCR, a first denaturation step was
done for 4 min at 94°C, and then 30 cycles of amplification were
performed as follows: 1 min at 94°C, 1 min at 65°C, and 1 min at
72°C. Cycling was concluded with a final extension step of 15 min at
72°C.
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Results
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Autologous CTL clones directed against melanoma cell line
LB1751-MEL
By stimulating PBL from patient LB1751 with irradiated autologous
melanoma cell line LB1751-MEL, we obtained a panel of 23 CTL clones
that specifically lysed LB1751-MEL cells, but not an autologous
EBV-transformed B cell line LB1751-EBV or the NK-sensitive cell line
K562. Among them, 5 clones were successfully maintained in long-term
culture. Their lytic activities are shown by representative CTL clone
447A/5 in Fig. 1
.

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FIGURE 1. Specific lysis of autologous LB1751-MEL cells by CTL 447A/5. Control
targets included autologous EBV-transformed lymphoblastoid line
LB1751-EBV and NK-sensitive line K562. Chromium release was measured
after 4 h of incubation of chromium-labeled target cells with the
CTL at different E:T ratios.
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CTL clone 447A/5 produced TNF when stimulated with LB1751-MEL cells,
and this production of TNF was inhibited by mAb W6/32, which recognizes
all HLA class I molecules, and BB7.2, which is specific for HLA-A2, but
not by mAb B1.23.2, which recognizes a common determinant of HLA-B and
HLA-C molecules (data not shown), indicating that the target Ag is
presented by HLA-A2.
CTL 447A/5 recognizes an Ag encoded by MAGE-A10
Because of the high expression level of almost all the
MAGE-A genes in melanoma cell line LB1751-MEL (data not
shown), we first tested the possibility that CTL 447A/5 recognizes an
Ag encoded by one of the MAGE-A genes. We cotransfected into
COS-7 cells the cDNA of each MAGE-A gene cloned in
expression vector pcDNAI/Amp together with pcDNAI/Amp-A2, a construct
encoding HLA-A2.1. The transfectants were tested for their ability to
stimulate TNF production by CTL 447A/5. A very significant amount of
TNF was produced by the CTL when stimulated with COS-7 cells
transfected with MAGE-A10 (Table I
). Transfectants obtained with
MAGE-A8 also stimulated TNF release, but to a lesser extent.
No stimulation was observed with COS-7 cells transfected with HLA-A2.1
alone or with the combination of HLA-A2.1 and any of the other
MAGE-A genes.
We further examined the recognition by CTL 447A/5 of allogeneic
HLA-A2+ tumor cell lines that express MAGE-A10
or MAGE-A8. The two MAGE-A10+
melanoma cell lines LB373-MEL and AVL3-MEL could stimulate the CTL to
produce TNF, but MAGE-A8+ cell line TT could not
(Fig. 2
A). In addition,
LB373-MEL cells were lysed by CTL 447A/5, though less efficiently than
the autologous tumor line LB1751-MEL (Fig. 2
B). AVL3-MEL
cells showed a low level of sensitivity to lysis that could be
increased by IFN-
treatment. TT cells were not lysed by CTL 447A/5
even when pretreated with IFN-
.

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FIGURE 2. Recognition of allogeneic tumor cell lines by CTL 447A/5.
A, LB373-MEL (MAGE-A10+),
AVL3-MEL (MAGE-A10+), and TT
(MAGE-A8+) cell lines derived from HLA-A2
patients were used to stimulate CTL 447A/5. Autologous tumor cell line
LB1751-MEL was included as a control. After 24 h of coculture,
production of TNF by the CTL was measured by testing toxicity of the
supernatants to TNF-sensitive WEHI-164.13 cells. B,
Lysis of LB373-MEL, AVL3-MEL and TT cell lines was assessed by the
chromium release assay. Autologous tumor cell line LB1751-MEL was
included as a control target. Chromium release was measured after
4 h of incubation of chromium-labeled target cells with the CTL at
different E:T ratios.
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Identification of the MAGE-A10 antigenic peptide
In an attempt to identify the MAGE-A10 sequence that
codes for the antigenic peptide, we generated by PCR amplification
fragments of different lengths starting from the initiation codon.
These subgenic fragments were cloned in pcDNAI/Amp and transfected into
COS-7 cells together with the construct carrying the HLA-A2 gene. CTL
stimulation assay was conducted with the transfectants. As shown in
Fig. 3
, a fragment of 825 bp rendered the
transfectants capable of stimulating TNF production by CTL 447A/5,
whereas a 546-bp fragment did not, indicating that the sequence coding
for the antigenic peptide is located between nucleotide 522 and 825 of
the MAGE-A10 ORF. In the amino acid sequence corresponding
to nucleotides 522825, we observed two nonapeptides, MLLVFGIDV
(codons 183191) and GLYDGMEHL (254262), which conformed to the
HLA-A2.1 peptide binding motif, i.e., Leu or Met at position 2 and Leu,
Val, or Ile at the C terminus (27). Nonapeptide GLYDGMEHL (254262)
and, less efficiently, decapeptide GLYDGMEHLI (254263), could
sensitize the autologous lymphoblastoid cell line LB1751-EBV to lysis
by CTL 447A/5 (Fig. 4
A). When
pretreated with anti-HLA-A2 Ab MA2.1 for 1 h before peptide
sensitization, LB1751-EBV cells pulsed with both peptides showed a
significantly increased sensitivity to lysis by the CTL (Fig. 4
B). mAb MA2.1 has been reported to facilitate the binding
of peptides to HLA-A2 molecules on the cell surface, thereby augmenting
the sensitivity of peptide-sensitized target cells to CTL lysis (25).

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FIGURE 3. Identification of the region coding for the antigenic peptide
recognized by CTL 447A/5. PCR fragments of different lengths were
cloned into pcDNAI/Amp and cotransfected into COS-7 cells with gene
HLA-A2.1. Transfected cells were incubated for 24 h with CTL
447A/5, and the TNF in the supernatants was measured by its toxicity to
WEHI-164.13 cells.
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FIGURE 4. Lysis by CTL 447A/5 of peptide-sensitized LB1751-EBV cells.
A, LB1751-EBV cells pulsed with peptides derived from
MAGE-A10. Chromium-labeled autologous EBV-transformed
lymphoblastoid cells LB1751-EBV were pulsed for 30 min with peptides as
indicated at various concentrations before addition of CTL 447A/5 at an
E:T ratio of 20. Chromium release was measured after 4 h.
B, Enhancement by mAb MA2.1 of lysis of LB1751-EBV cells
pulsed with MAGE-A10 peptides. LB1751-EBV cells were pretreated with
anti-HLA-A2 Ab MA2.1 by adding the Ab during
51Cr-labeling. Peptide sensitization and chromium release
assay were conducted as in A.
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The fact that MAGE-A8-transfected COS-7 cells also
stimulated CTL 447A/5 to produce TNF, albeit less efficiently (Table I
), prompted us to test peptide GLYDGREHS encoded by the homologous
region of MAGE-A8. This peptide did not sensitize LB1751-EBV
cells to lysis by CTL 447A/5 unless the peptide was used at 100 µM, a
concentration that is too high for a peptide to be considered as a
specific Ag in physiological conditions. Even after pretreatment with
Ab MA2.1, LB1751-EBV cells were not lysed unless the peptide was used
at a concentration as high as 10 µM. The overlapping decapeptide
GLYDGREHSV also failed to sensitize LB1751-EBV cells to lysis. The
ability of COS-7 cells transfected with MAGE-A8 to stimulate
CTL 447A/5 to produce TNF is presumably due to the considerable
replication of the transfected gene, resulting in very high levels of
MAGE-A8 peptide GLYDGREHS presented on the surface by HLA-A2.1
molecules.
MAGE-A10 is expressed in a variety of tumors
The expression of MAGE-A10 has been studied previously
only in a small number of tumors. To obtain a better evaluation of the
frequency of tumors expressing this gene, we tested a series of 314
samples of tumors of various histological types by RT-PCR with primers
ensuring specificity for gene MAGE-A10. As shown in Table II
, it was expressed in a high proportion
of lung carcinomas, bladder carcinomas, head and neck and esophageal
carcinomas, and melanomas. Of the 71 tumor samples expressing
MAGE-A10, all but two expressed simultaneously at least one
of genes MAGE-A1, -A2, -A3, -A4 or -A6 (data not
shown).
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Discussion
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The MAGE, BAGE, and GAGE gene
families have been identified on the basis of anti-tumoral CTL
clones obtained following autologous MLTC conducted with a single
melanoma patient, namely patient MZ2 (2, 3, 11, 12, 28, 29). Six
different Ags encoded by these genes and presented by HLA-A1, Cw16, and
Cw6 were identified. Curiously, when we later analyzed the CTL
responses of several other patients bearing melanoma tumors expressing
various MAGE-type genes, we obtained no CTL directed against MAGE, BAGE
or GAGE Ags. The CTL were directed either against differentiation Ags
such as tyrosinase or Melan-A/Mart-1 or against Ags encoded by mutated
or overexpressed genes (30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35). However, autologous CTL were also
obtained recently that were directed against Ags encoded by MAGE-type
gene NY-ESO-1 (36, 37). CTL clone 447A/5 reported here is the first
anti-MAGE CTL obtained by autologous MLTC with a patient
other than MZ2. This CTL recognizes the MAGE-A10-encoded
nonapeptide GLYDGMEHL, which is presented by HLA-A2. The CTL recognized
not only the autologous melanoma cells but also other HLA-A2 tumor
cells expressing MAGE-A10. We have confirmed that
MAGE-A10 is expressed in a variety of tumor types including
melanomas, lung cancers, head and neck and esophageal carcinomas, and
bladder carcinomas, where the gene is expressed in more than 30% of
the samples.
In a previous report, we suggested, on the basis of semiquantitative
RT-PCR assays, that all the tumors expressing MAGE-A10
expressed the gene at a very low level (4). The level we observed was
deemed unlikely to be sufficient for the production of enough antigenic
peptides to allow recognition by CTL (38). However, it was later
observed with a mAb that a tumor with a high level of
MAGE-A1 expression contained similar amount of MAGE-A1 and
MAGE-A10 protein (39). This led us to reconsider our
MAGE-A10 assay, and we have now reached by two different
methods the conclusion that the tumors expressing MAGE-A10
express this gene at levels that are similar to those observed for
MAGE-A1. In melanoma MZ2-MEL, for instance, the frequency of
the MAGE-A1 message is 1/5500 and that of the
MAGE-A10 message is 1/6600 (our unpublished data). We
conclude that there is no discrepancy between the level of expression
of MAGE-A10 and the fact that an Ag encoded by
MAGE-A10 can be recognized by a CTL.
An immunotherapy trial of metastatic melanoma patients with detectable
disease, which involves immunization with MAGE-A3 peptide presented by
HLA-A1, has recently been completed (40, 41). Of the 25 patients who
received the complete treatment, i.e., three monthly injections of
peptide in skin location distant from the tumor, seven patients showed
partial or complete tumor regressions. Surprisingly, no CTL response
against the MAGE-A3 Ag could be documented with lymphocytes present in
the blood. In trials involving peptide-pulsed dendritic cells, it was
reported that some patients developed delayed-type hypersensitivity or
CTL responses (42, 43, 44). The identification of a MAGE-A10 Ag presented
by HLA-A2 will make it possible to extend such immunotherapy trials to
a wider group of patients.
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Acknowledgments
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We thank Madeleine Swinarska, Anne Gustin, and Maria
Panagiotakopoulos for technical assistance. We are grateful to Vincent
Stroobant and Anne Authom for the synthesis of peptides.
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Footnotes
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1 L.-Q. H. was supported by a postdoctoral fellowship from the International Institute of Cellular Pathology, Brussels, Belgium. 
2 Current address: Serv. Analisis Clinicos (Inmunologia), Hospital Virgen de las Nieves, 18014 Granada, Spain. 
3 Address correspondence and reprint requests to Dr. Aline Van Pel, Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research, Brussels Branch, 74 Avenue Hippocrate, UCL 7459, B-1200 Brussels, Belgium. E-mail address: 
4 Abbreviations used in this paper: CTL, cytolytic T lymphocyte; MLTC, mixed lymphocyte-tumor cell culture; ORF, open reading frame; rh, recombinant human. 
Received for publication December 21, 1998.
Accepted for publication March 9, 1999.
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