Protein SSX2 (41-49)
Need Assistance?
  • US & Canada:
    +
  • UK: +

Protein SSX2 (41-49)

* Please kindly note that our products are not to be used for therapeutic purposes and cannot be sold to patients.

A peptide fragment of Protein SSX2. Protein SSX2 may function as transcriptional repressors. They are also capable of eliciting spontaneously humoral and cellular immune responses in cancer patients, and are potentially useful targets in cancer vaccine-based immunotherapy.

Category
Others
Catalog number
BAT-009794
Synonyms
Cancer/testis antigen 5.2 (41-49); Synovial sarcoma, X breakpoint 2 (41-49); Tumor antigen HOM-MEL-40 (41-49)
Sequence
KASEKIFYV
Storage
Common storage 2-8°C, long time storage -20°C.
1. Tumor-reactive, SSX-2-specific CD8+ T cells are selectively expanded during immune responses to antigen-expressing tumors in melanoma patients
Maha Ayyoub, Donata Rimoldi, Philippe Guillaume, Pedro Romero, Jean-Charles Cerottini, Danila Valmori, Daniel Speiser Cancer Res. 2003 Sep 1;63(17):5601-6.
The SSX-2 gene encodes a tumor-specific antigen expressed in neoplasms of various histological types. By analyzing a tumor-infiltrated lymph node of a melanoma patient bearing an SSX-2-expressing tumor, we have recently identified the first SSX-2-derived CD8(+) T-cell epitope, that corresponds to peptide SSX-2(41-49), and is recognized by specific CTL in an HLA-A2 restricted fashion. Here, we have used fluorescent HLA-A2/SSX-2(41-49) peptide multimeric complexes to analyze the response to SSX-2(41-49) in melanoma patients and healthy donors. Multimer(+) CD8(+) T cells were readily detected in the majority of patients bearing SSX-2-expressing tumors and, at lower proportions, in patients with nonexpressing tumors and healthy donors. Importantly, isolated A2/SSX-2(41-49) multimer(+) CD8(+) T cells exhibited a large functional heterogeneity in terms of antigen recognition and tumor reactivity. SSX-2-specific CTLs isolated from tumor-infiltrated lymph node of antigen-expressing patients as well as from the corresponding peripheral blood mononuclear cells exhibited high functional avidity of antigen recognition and efficiently recognized antigen-expressing tumors. In contrast, SSX-2-specific CTLs isolated from patients with undetectable responses in the tumor-infiltrated lymph node, as well as from healthy donors, recognized the antigen with decreased functional avidity and were not tumor reactive. Together, these data indicate that CD8(+) T-cell responses to SSX-2(41-49) frequently occur in SSX-2-expressing melanoma patients and suggest that SSX-2(41-49)-specific CTLs of high avidity and tumor reactivity are selectively expanded during immune responses to SSX-2-expressing tumors in vivo.
2. Proteasome-assisted identification of a SSX-2-derived epitope recognized by tumor-reactive CTL infiltrating metastatic melanoma
Maha Ayyoub, et al. J Immunol. 2002 Feb 15;168(4):1717-22. doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.168.4.1717.
The tumor Ag SSX-2 (HOM-MEL-40) was found by serological identification of Ags by recombinant expression cloning and was shown to be a cancer/testis Ag expressed in a wide variety of tumors. It may therefore represent a source of CD8(+) T cell epitopes useful for specific immunotherapy of cancer. To identify potential SSX-2-derived epitopes that can be recognized by CD8(+) T cells, we used an approach that combined: 1) the in vitro proteasomal digestion of precursor peptides overlapping the complete SSX-2 sequence; 2) the prediction of SSX-2-derived peptides with an appropriate HLA-A2 binding score; and 3) the analysis of a tumor-infiltrated lymph node cell population from an HLA-A2(+) melanoma patient with detectable anti-SSX-2 serum Abs. This strategy allowed us to identify peptide SSX-2(41-49) as an HLA-A2-restricted epitope. SSX2(41-49)-specific CD8(+) T cells were readily detectable in the tumor-infiltrated lymph node population by multimer staining, and CTL clones isolated by multimer-guided cell sorting were able to lyse HLA-A2(+) tumor cells expressing SSX-2.
3. Distinct but overlapping T helper epitopes in the 37-58 region of SSX-2
Maha Ayyoub, et al. Clin Immunol. 2005 Jan;114(1):70-8. doi: 10.1016/j.clim.2004.08.014.
Because of their specific expression in tumors of different histological types, the products of the SSX genes are important candidate targets for development of cancer vaccines. We have previously identified two immunodominant SSX-2-derived T cell epitopes recognized by HLA-A2-restricted CD8+ T cells (SSX-2 41-49) and HLA-DR11-restricted CD4+ T cells (SSX-2 45-59), respectively. In this study, we report the identification of an HLA-DR3-restricted epitope mapping to the 37-51 region of SSX-2, overlapping both previously identified epitopes. As about one fifth of individuals from several major ethnic groups express HLA-DR3, the identification of this epitope significantly increases the percent of patients that are expected to mount specific CD4+ T cell responses following vaccination with peptides in this region of SSX-2. Retrieval of multiple overlapping epitopes in a defined region of SSX-2 protein suggests the presence of a "hot spot" for T cell recognition that may prove sufficient for the induction of immune responses.
Online Inquiry
Verification code
Inquiry Basket