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Identification of survivin as a promising target for the immunotherapy of adult B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia

  • Laura Freire Boullosa
  • , Payalben Savaliya
  • , Stephanie A. Bonney
  • , Laurence Orchard
  • , Hannah Wickenden
  • , Cindy Lee
  • , Evelien L.J. Smits
  • , Alison H. Banham
  • , Ken I. Mills
  • , Kim H. Orchard
  • , Barbara Guinn
    • University of Hull
    • University of Antwerp
    • University of Bedfordshire
    • University of Southampton
    • University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust
    • University of Oxford
    • Queen's University Belfast

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    14 Citations (Scopus)
    1 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    B-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia (B-ALL) is a rare heterogeneous disease characterized by a block in lymphoid differentiation and a rapid clonal expansion of immature, non-functioning B cells. Adult B-ALL patients have a poor prognosis with less than 50% chance of survival after five years and a high relapse rate after allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Novel treatment approaches are required to improve the outcome for patients and the identification of B-ALL specific antigens are essential for the development of targeted immunotherapeutic treatments. We examined twelve potential target antigens for the immunotherapy of adult B-ALL. RT-PCR indicated that only survivin and WT1 were expressed in B-ALL patient samples (7/11 and 6/11, respectively) but not normal donor control samples (0/8). Real-time quantitative (RQ)-PCR showed that survivin was the only antigen whose transcript exhibited significantly higher expression in the B-ALL samples (n = 10) compared with healthy controls (n = 4)(p = 0.015). Immunolabelling detected SSX2, SSX2IP, survivin and WT1 protein expression in all ten B-ALL samples examined, but survivin was not detectable in healthy volunteer samples. To determine whether these findings were supported by the analyses of a larger cohort of patient samples, we performed metadata analysis on an already published microarray dataset. We found that only survivin was significantly over-expressed in B-ALL patients (n = 215) compared to healthy B-cell controls (n = 12)(p = 0.013). We have shown that survivin is frequently transcribed and translated in adult B-ALL, but not healthy donor samples, suggesting this may be a promising target patient group for survivin-mediated immunotherapy.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)3853-3866
    JournalOncotarget
    Volume9
    Issue number3
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 17 Dec 2017

    Keywords

    • survivin
    • WT1
    • immunotherapy
    • antigen identification
    • acute lymphocytic leukemia

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