[PDF][PDF] Androgen ablation mitigates tolerance to a prostate/prostate cancer-restricted antigen

CG Drake, ADH Doody, MA Mihalyo, CT Huang… - Cancer cell, 2005 - cell.com
CG Drake, ADH Doody, MA Mihalyo, CT Huang, E Kelleher, S Ravi, EL Hipkiss, DB Flies
Cancer cell, 2005cell.com
To understand the T cell response to prostate cancer, we created transgenic mice that
express a model antigen in a prostate-restricted pattern and crossed these animals to
TRAMP mice that develop spontaneous prostate cancer. Adoptive transfer of prostate-
specific CD4 T cells shows that, in the absence of prostate cancer, the prostate gland is
mostly ignored. Tumorigenesis allows T cell recognition of the prostate gland—but this
recognition is tolerogenic, resulting in abortive proliferation and ultimately in …
Summary
To understand the T cell response to prostate cancer, we created transgenic mice that express a model antigen in a prostate-restricted pattern and crossed these animals to TRAMP mice that develop spontaneous prostate cancer. Adoptive transfer of prostate-specific CD4 T cells shows that, in the absence of prostate cancer, the prostate gland is mostly ignored. Tumorigenesis allows T cell recognition of the prostate gland—but this recognition is tolerogenic, resulting in abortive proliferation and ultimately in hyporesponsiveness at the systemic level. Androgen ablation (the most common treatment for metastatic prostate cancer) was able to mitigate this tolerance—allowing prostate-specific T cells to expand and develop effector function after vaccination. These results suggest that immunotherapy for prostate cancer may be most efficacious when administered after androgen ablation.
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