HISTOLOGY AND HISTOPATHOLOGY

Cellular and Molecular Biology

Review

Survivin - a universal tumor antigen

M.H. Andersen and P. thor Straten

Tumor Immunology Group, Danish Cancer Society, Strandvoulevarden, Copenhagen, Denmark

Offprint requests to: Mads Hald Andersen, Tumor Immunology Group, Danish Cancer Society, Strandboulevarden 49-DK-2100 Copenhagen, Denmark. Fax: +45-3525-7721. e-mail: mha@cancer.dk

 

Summary. Tumor-associated antigens recognized by cellular effectors of the immune system are potential targets for antigen-specific cancer immunotherapy. These antigens are classified as tissue (melanocyte)-specific proteins, cancer-testis antigens (proteins expressed in normal testis and various cancers), tumor-specific peptides derived from mutations in tumor cells, and others. Clinical studies with peptides and proteins derived from these antigens have been initiated to study the efficacy of inducing specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTL) responses in vivo. However, most of the peptide epitopes used in these vaccination trials are melanocyte-specific, and these peptides cannot be applied for tumors of non-melanocyte origin. Furthermore, the expression of most tumor antigens is heterogeneous among tumors from different patients and can even vary among metastases obtained from one patient. Immune selection of antigen loss variants may prove to be an additional obstacle for the clinical applicability of most of the known CTL epitopes. Recently, a new tumor antigen, survivin, has been identified on the basis of spontaneous CTL responses in different cancer patients. Survivin is expressed in most human neoplasms, but not in normal, differentiated tissues. Importantly, downregulation or loss of survivin would severely inflict the growth potential of the tumor cell. Since survivin is expressed by a variety of different tumors MHC-restricted survivin epitopes may serve as important and widely applicable targets for anti-cancer immunotherapeutic strategies. Histol. Histopathol. 17, 669-675 (2002)

Key words: Survivin, Tumor antigens, T-cells, Cancer, Immunotherapy

DOI: 10.14670/HH-17.669