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Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy : CII logoLink to Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy : CII
. 1999 Sep;48(7):401–410. doi: 10.1007/s002620050593

HER-2/neu peptide specificity in the recognition of HLA-A2 by natural killer cells

Larry D Anderson Jr 1, J Michael Hudson 1, Cherylyn A Savary 2, Bryan Fisk 1, David M Gershenson 1, Constantin G Ioannides 1
PMCID: PMC11037185  PMID: 10501854

Abstract

Although natural killer (NK) cells have been described as non-MHC-restricted, new evidence suggests that NK activity can be either up- or down-regulated after interaction with the peptide–MHC-class-I complex expressed on target cells. However, the epitope(s) recognized by NK cells have remained ill-defined. We investigated NK cell recognition of synthetic peptides representing a portion of a self-protein encoded by the HER-2/neu (HER-2) proto-oncogene and presented by HLA-A2. HER-2 nonapeptides C85, E89, and E75 were found partially to protect T2 targets from lysis by freshly isolated and interleukin-2(IL-2)-activated NK cells (either HLA-A2+ or A2). This inhibition was not solely due to changes in the level of HLA-A2 expression or conformation of serological HLA-A2 epitopes. Using single-amino-acid variants at position 1 (P1) of two HER-2 peptides, we observed that protection of targets was dependent on the sequence and the side-chain. These results suggest similarities in the mechanism of target recognition by NK and T cells. This information may be important for understanding the mechanisms of tumor escape from immunosurveillance and could help explain the aggressiveness of HER-2-overexpressing tumor cells.

Keywords: Key words Natural killer cells, HER-2/neu, Peptides, MHC, Tumor immunity

Footnotes

Received: 16 March 1999 / Accepted: 3 June 1999


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