Method for identifying or isolating a molecule and molecules identified thereby

Abstract
The invention described methods for identifying a molecule of interest, as well as nucleic acid molecules which encode it, and binding partners for it. A cDNA library from a cell expressing the target is prepared, and expressed in host cells. Lysates of the host cells are screened with a sample, treated to remove interfering binding partners. The treatment involves contact of the sample to lysates of untransfected host cells, and host cells transfected or transformed with the same vector used to make the cDNA library. Also a part of the invention are antigens and cDNA identified using the methodology.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




This invention relates to methodologies for identifying molecules of interest. In particularly preferred embodiments, the invention relates to the identification of molecules associated with pathological conditions such as cancer, (melanoma or renal cancer, e.g.), Hodgkin's Disease, autoimmune diseases and so forth. Also a part of the invention are the isolated molecules found as a result of the inventive method. These molecules include, inter alia, protein-containing molecules, isolated nucleic acid molecules encoding these, and antibodies which specifically bind to the protein-containing molecules. For convenience, the method described herein will be referred to as “serological fishing”.




BACKGROUND AND PRIOR ART




It is fairly well established that many pathological conditions, such as infections, cancer, autoimmune disorders, etc., are characterized by the inappropriate expression of certain molecules. These molecules thus serve as “markers” for a particular pathological or abnormal condition. Apart from their use as diagnostic “targets”, i.e., materials to be identified to diagnose these abnormal conditions, the molecules serve as reagents which can be used to generate diagnostic and/or therapeutic agents. A by no means limiting example of this is the use of cancer markers to produce antibodies specific to a particular marker. Yet another non-limiting example is the use of a peptide which complexes with an MHC molecule, to generate cytolytic T cells against abnormal cells.




Preparation of such materials, of course, presupposes a source of the reagents used to generate these. Purification from cells is one laborious, far from sure method of doing so. Another preferred method is the isolation of nucleic acid molecules which encode a particular marker, followed by the use of the isolated encoding molecule to express the desired molecule.




To date, two strategies have been employed for the detection of such antigens, in e.g., human tumors. These will be referred to as the genetic approach and the biochemical approach. The genetic approach is exemplified by, e.g., dePlaen et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 85: 2275 (1988), incorporated by reference. In this approach, several hundred pools of plasmids of a cDNA library obtained from a tumor are transfected into recipient cells, such as COS cells, or into antigen-negative variants of tumor cell lines which are tested for the expression of the specific antigen. The biochemical approach, exemplified by, e.g., Falk et al., Nature 351: 290 (1991), and Kawakami et al., Nature 369: 69 (1994) both of which are incorporated by reference, is based on acidic elution of peptides which have bound to MHC-I molecules of tumor cells, followed by reversed-phase high performance liquid chromotogaphy (HPLC). Antigenic peptides are identified after they bind to empty MHC-I molecules of mutant cell lines, defective in antigen processing, and induction of specific reactions cytotoxic T-lymphocytes. These reactions include induction of CTL proliferation, TNF release, and lysis of target cells, measurable in an MTT assay, or a


51


Cr release assay.




These two approaches to the molecular definition of antigens have the following disadvantages: first, they are enormously cumbersome, time-consuming and expensive; second, they depend on the establishment of cytotoxic T cell lines (CTLs) with predefined specificity; third, their relevance in vivo for the course of the pathology or disease in question has not been proven, as the respective CTLs can be obtained not only from patients with the respective disease, but also from healthy individuals, depending on their T cell repertoire.




The problems inherent to the two known approaches for the identification and molecular definition of antigens is best demonstrated by the fact that both methods have, so far, succeeded in defining only very few new antigens in human tumors. See, e.g., van der Bruggen et al., Science 254: 1643-1647 (1991); Brichard et al., J. Exp. Med. 178: 489-495 (1993); Coulie, et al., J. Exp. Med. 180: 35-42 (1994), Kawakami et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 91: 3515-3519 (1994).




It would be desirable to have available a method which can be used not only for detection of tumor-associated antigens, but to determine molecules associated with any abnormal or pathological condition. Such a method would also facilitate the identification of such molecules, thereby enabling their use on the generation of, e.g., antibodies, cytolytic T cells, and so forth.




It is therefore the purpose of the present invention to develop a method for the simple detection and molecular characterization of antigens in human tissues, especially in tumor cells, which are useful in the molecular diagnosis of diseases and/or for immunotherapy and gene therapy of infectious, autoimmune and malignant diseases. The invention is delineated in the disclosure which follows.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES





FIG. 1

shows the principles of the approach of the invention.





FIG. 2

shows a nitrocellulose membrane with a positive clone derived from the cDNA of a renal cell clear carcinoma that reacts with a 1:100 dilution of the patient's serum.





FIG. 3

shows, in bar graph form, the Northern Blot analysis of clone HOM-RCC-313 in renal cell carcinoma, normal kidney and other human tissues.





FIG. 4

shows the translated region of the gene coding for HOM-RCC-313 SEQ. ID. NO. 1.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




The following disclosure describes a methodology referred to as serological fishing. In it, a cell sample is taken from a subject afflicted with a pathological condition. The cells preferably are exemplary of the pathology. For example, if the subject has melanoma, the cells are melanoma cells. If the subject is suffering from a neural disorder, e.g., then the cells are preferably a sample of the afflicted cells. This approach is warranted because the afflicted cells are most probably the best source of protein-containing molecules of interest, i.e., such molecules which are specifically associated with the pathological condition of interest.




Note that cells representative of pathological conditions are not the only cells which may be used in the inventive method. It is very important, e.g., to ascertain those cellular “markers” associated with differentiation and maturation of cells, for example. The example of hematopoietic stem cells comes to mind. Similarly, the invention contemplates the isolation of, e.g., receptor molecules for specific ligands. In effect, one can assay for the presence of any molecule of interest using this methodology.




The cells chosen are then used to prepare a library of complementary DNA (i.e., “cDNA”). This methodology is well known to the skilled artisan, and need not be reiterated here. It is, of course, based upon the established fact that if proteins are expressed by the cells, then messenger RNA (mRNA) must be present. These mRNA molecules are not long lived, and are unstable, so they are not practical to work with. The stability brought to the molecules when cDNA is used is very helpful to the method.




Once the CDNA is made, it is used to construct a vector library. In short, carrier vectors are treated, such as by cutting and splicing, to receive molecules of cDNA. The choice of vector may vary, as the skilled artisan is well familiar with many such examples.




Especially preferred are virus based vectors. In the case of eukaryotic cells, retrovirus or adenovirus based vectors are preferred. Such vectors contain all or a part of a viral genome, such as long term repeats (“LTRs”), promoters (e.g., CMV promoters, SV40 promoter, RSV promoter), enhancers, and so forth. When the host cell is a prokaryote, bacterial viruses, or phages, are preferred. Exemplary of such vectors are vectors based upon, e.g., lambda phage. In any case, the vector may comprise elements of more than one virus.




The resulting vectors are transfected or transformed into a host cell, which may be eukaryotic or prokaryotic.




Any cell normally used for transfection or transformation may be used in the protocol. Preferred materials include strains of


E. coli


, CHO cells such as CHO-1, COS cells such as COS-7, and so forth. Similarly, yeast cells, e.g., strains of Saccharomyces, strains of Pseudomonas, such as strains of


Pseudomonas aeruginosa


, Bacillus bacteria,


Spodoptera frugiperda


, a well known insect host cell, and so forth, may all be used.




Once the recipient cells receive the vectors, they are cultivated so as to express foreign, protein containing molecules. “Protein-containing” is used herein because, while prokaryotes express only proteins, eukaryotic cells are well known for their ability to post-translationally modify proteins, so as to produce glycoproteins, lipoproteins, e.g. It must also be borne in mind that “protein containing” as used herein, also encompasses peptides, such as the peptides presented by MHC molecules.




The processes now described below take place independently of the process described above, and no chronological relationship between the two facets of the invention is intended.




In pathological conditions such as cancer and, e.g., autoimmune diseases, there is some immune reaction to molecules associated with the pathology. This reaction can include an antibody response, B cell proliferation, proliferation of specific T cell subpopulations, increases in cytokine production, and so forth. The molecules and cells associated with the response may be found in body fluids of a subject, such as his or her serum. The immune responders will react with the molecule of interest whether it is produced recombinantly or autologously. The problem is to find them. As the examples show, this is done in a unique way. First, the body fluid, or other sample of interest, is reacted with a sample of the same host cells used for transfection or transformation. In this first step, the host cells are not transfected or transformed. The effect of this is to strip any immunogenic binding partners specific for the host cell rather than the targeted molecule. This step is necessary because, as was pointed out, supra, the host cell may be one against which the subject has developed an immune respone at some point. This first stripping removes these immune components.




A second stripping step is then carried out. In this step, the previously stripped sample is now reacted with a sample of the same host cell as was described supra, this time having been transfected or transformed with the carrier vector lacking cDNA from the subject. The reason for this second stripping step is an observation made by the present inventors not reported in the literature. The materials used as vectors, such as phages, viruses, etc., are useful because they naturally infect cells. Thus,


E. coli


which inhabit the lower intestine of humans, are infected with lambda phage. It had not been considered, previously, that the immune response to


E. coli


includes a response to these infectious agents. Thus, applicants have surprisingly, achieved an ability to remove interfering immune components to an unprecedented degree by carrying out the two stripping steps. As noted, the first is against untransfected or untransformed host cells. The second is against host cells transfected or transformed with a vector which does not carry cDNA, wherein the vector is immunologically equivalent to the vector used to carry cDNA, as described supra.




It is especially preferred to carry out each of these stripping steps using a plurality of similar, but different procedures. The experiments which follow, for example, show absorption on a solid phase column, and then absorption on nitrocellulose paper. Applicants do not wish to be bound by any theory as to why the use of two similar but different protocols produces the results described herein. It is to be borne in mind, hereafter, that whenever “contacting a sample” is used herein, it is not to be limited to one contact step only, but may refer to more than one, preferably different contact protocols designed to remove interfering binding partners from a sample under scrutiny.




It should be understood that these stripping steps may be done completely independently of the steps used to prepare the cDNA library. For example, if the test for an antigen is to be done at day “O”, the stripping of sample may be done the day before, a week before, and so forth. One can also “bank” stripped sample from a donor or subject for future use.




The sample used is preferably serum, but need not be. Any sample which contains immunogenic binding partners may be so used.




In the next step of the method, lysed, transfected cells carrying the cDNA and expressing heterologous protein are contacted with the twice stripped sample. This sample should only contain immune components specific for the heterologous protein, and should bind thereto. This binding is facilitated if the cell lysates have been immobilized via contact to, e.g., activated filter paper, a solid phase column, etc.,. but this solid phase binding is not necessary, as the art will surely recognize that many, varied forms of assays are available for identifying a molecule of interest.




Once the immune component binds to the target molecule, a further step is desirably, but not necessarily, carried out. This additional step involves the use of some binding partner for the first immune component, such as anti-IgG, carrying an identifiable label. The label may be a dye, an enzyme, a gold particle, a radiolabel, or any of the standard labels used in immunoassays.




Once identification is carried out, the immune components are removed, leaving the target molecule. The target molecule is then studied, using any of the standard methodologies in the art.




The artisan will note that the methodology also results in isolation of immune components which bind to the molecule of interest. Thus, in another aspect of the invention one can isolate antibodies, e.g., which are specific binding partners for the molecule of interest.




Yet another immune component which may be identified and isolated following the invention is a cytolytic T cell (“CTL” hereafter), specific for complexes of peptides derived from the identified molecule and MHC molecules to which these peptides bind, forming a complex. It is fairly well accepted that a CTL response involves the identification of complexes of MHC molecules and peptides, generally about 8-12 amino acids in length, but most preferably 9 or 10 amino acids in length, by T cell receptors (“TCRs”) on the surface of circulating T cells. The TCRs react by binding to these complexes, setting in motion as it were a series of reactions including the proliferation of CTLs specific for these complexes. One can produce and/or isolate such CTLs using the method of the invention, plus further steps.




As is pointed out in the examples which follow as well as the disclosure in general, one can easily identify cDNA encoding an antigen of interest. Once this is identified, one uses the CDNA to transfect host cells which either already present desired MHC molecules on their surface, or which have been transfected with DNA encoding these MHC molecules. The cDNA for the molecule of interest is expressed, and the molecule is processed to antigenic peptides which are presented by MHC molecules, such as HLA molecules. CTLs directed against the complexes are obtained from lymphocytes, such as autologous lymphocytes. From responder cell populations, long-term CTL clones are then obtained by the well known technique of limiting dilution. Once a positive CTL response is observed, the specific peptides presented to the CTLs are identified using established methods for example, screening the specific of previously identified CTL clones. Alternatively, the more recently described method of studying the sequence of the molecule of interest to identify potential MHC-binding motifs then analyzing these peptides, first for binding to the relevant MHC molecule and then, if positive for MHC-binding, for their ability to generate CTLs recognizing the peptide MHC complex. Of course the peptides can also be eluted from the cells and sequenced, using well known techniques.




It will also be noted by the skilled artisan that one can correlate the expression of the molecule of interest back to a particular host cell or cells which expressed it. In so doing, one can remove the cDNA which expressed the molecule of interest, sequence it, and so forth. This aspect of the method is another feature of the invention.




Specific embodiments of the invention will be seen in the examples which follow.

FIG. 1

depicts the method generally.




EXAMPLE 1




For the establishment of a cDNA library from human tissue total RNA was obtained from 0.5.g of a renal clear cell carcinoma and established according to the method of Chomzynski, J. Analyt. Biochem. 162: 156-159 (1987), incorporated by reference. The mRNA was extracted from total RNA with oligo-dT-cellulose. The synthesis of the first strand cDNA was accomplished by the method described by Gubler and Hoffmann, Gene 25: 263 (1983) using RNase H and DNA polymerase I. For adaptation of the cDNA Klenow enzyme, adaptors with EcoRI restriction enzyme sites were ligated to the cDNA ends using T4 DNA ligase (Ferretti V and Sgamerella V, Nucl. Acids Res. 9: 3695 (1981)). Following restriction enzymatic digestion with the enzyme XhoI, cDNA molecules of different length were separated using Sephacryl 400 and transfected into λZAPII phage vectors (Short et al., Nucleic Acids Res. 16: 7583 (1988)). The recombinant phage DNA was packed into phages after ligation with packing extracts and used for the transfection of


E. coli


bacteria. The titration of the library resulted in 1.8×10


6


recombinant primary clones. The total cDNA library was transfected in


E. coli


and amplified. The titer of the cDNA library after amplification was 10


11


plaque forming units per ml (pfu/ml). These transfected cells were used in experiments which follow.




EXAMPLE 2




In accordance with the invention as described, supra, identification of immunogenic material was achieved by using human sera which have been completely depleted of antibodies directed against antigens derived from native and lytic λ phage-transfected


E. coli


bacteria. To this end, the serum was “stripped” via absorption, as now described.






E. coli


bacteria of the strain XL1-blue were cultured in 50 ml LB medium overnight. After achieving an optical density of OD


600


=1.0, the bacteria were pelleted by centrifugation, resuspended in 5 ml phosphate buffered saline (PBS), and sonificated by ultrasound. The bacterial lysate was bound onto a matrix of activated Sepharose, which was then put into a column and used for the absorption of the human serum. The serum was run over this column 10 times.




A culture of


E. coli


XL1 blue bacteria in the exponential growth phase was pelleted by centrifugation, transfected in 0.01 M magnesium sulfate with 10


6


λZAPII phages without a recombinant insert and incubated in 5 ml LB medium for four hours. The lysate of the transfected bacteria was used in the same manner as the untransfected bacteria, with the human serum described supra being passed through the column an addition ten times.




To complete the depletion of the serum, interfering antibodies from lytically transfected


E. coli


bacteria were cultured on agar plates and their proteins were blotted onto nitrocellulose membranes after 10 hours of culture at 37° C. Following this, the serum which had been preabsorbed according to the above steps was transferred to the blotted nitrocellulose membrane, and the absorption procedure was repeated five times. The serum, which was processed in accordance with the invention, was totally depleted of antibodies directed against antigens derived from


E. coli


and phages.




EXAMPLE 3




In this, a renal cancer-specific antigen was identified via the following steps. Bacteria of the strain XL1


E. coli


blue were transfected with recombinant phages derived from the described cDNA library and plated at a density of 4-5×10


3


plaque forming units(pfu) per plate in LB-medium with isopropylthiogalactopyranoside (“IPTG”). After 12 hours of incubation at 37° C., nitrocellulose membranes were put on top of the cultures and culture plates were incubated for another four hours. This was followed by incubation of the nitrocellulose membrane for one hour in Tris-buffered saline (TBS) with 5% milk powder. After washing the nitrocellulose membranes three times in TBS, the stripped human serum secured following Example 2 was-diluted 1:1000 in TBS/0.5(w/v) milk powder and incubated overnight with gentle shaking. After the incubation with the nitrocellulose membrane the serum was removed and kept for additional testing. Following incubation with serum, the nitrocellulose membranes were washed three times in TBS, and incubated with a polyclonal alkaline phosphatase-conjugated goat anti-human IgG serum for one hour. Following this, the nitrocellulose membranes were washed repeatedly with TBS/0.01% (v/v Tween 20). The reaction was developed using nitroblue tetrazolium chloride and bromochloro-indoyl-phosphate in TBS. The binding of human antibodies to the expressed protein became visible by a blue ring-formed color deposit on the nitro-cellulose membrane. The efficient preabsorption of the serum made it possible to develop the membrane at 37° C. over several hours without compromising the quality of the test because of background reactivity caused by antibodies against


E. coli


and phage antigens.




Positive clones were localized on the agar plates, transferred into transfection buffer, and used for a second round of transfection and subcloning. A total of 1.8×10


6


recombinant clones were subjected to screening and five different positive-reacting clones were identified.




EXAMPLE 4




Positive clones secured following Example 3, i.e., those which had bound antibodies derived from the processed human serum, were subcloned to monoclonality by repeated rounds of transfection and testing of reactivity with the processed human serum. P-bluescript phagemids with the respective cDNA inserts were cloned by in vivo excision (Hay B and Short J M, Strategies 5: 16-19, 1992) from the λZAPII phage vectors and used for the transfection of


E. coli


SOLR bacteria. Plasmids were isolated from the bacteria after alkaline lysis with NaOH in a modification of the method of Birnboim and Doly, J. Nucl. Acids Res. 7: 1513 (1979). The recombinant plasmid DNA was sequenced according to the classic method of Sanger (Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 74: 5463 (1977)) using M13-forward and M13-reverse oligonucleotides. The DNA sequence obtained and the resulting amino acid sequence were checked for in nucleic acid and protein data banks (Gene Bank, EMBL, Swiss Prot). The sequencing of the cDNA inserts was continued using internal oligonucleotides. Analysis showed no homology with any sequences deposited in the data banks. The full length cDNA clone referred to as SK313, which had been cloned with the RACE method (Frohman M A, Dush M K, Martin G R, Proc. Natl. Acad Sci. USA 85: 8998 (1988)), had a carbonic anhydrase domain at the 5′ end. The nucleic acid sequence of this molecule is presented in SEQ ID NO: 1.

FIG. 2

shows a nitrocellulose membrane with a positive clone from these experiments.




EXAMPLE 5




As a follow up to these experiments, RNA was isolated from a spectrum of malignant and normal human tissues according to the method of Chomyznski and Sacchi, Analyt Biochem. 162: 156 (1987). After denaturation, the total isolated RNA was separated on an agarose gel containing 1% formaldehyde by electrophoresis (Goldberg Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 77: 5794 (1980)) and then blotted onto a nylon membrane according to a known method (Seed Nucl. Acids Res. 10: 1799 (1982)) Radiolabeled cDNA inserts of the identified clones were used for hybridization. The hybridization was carried out according to a known method (Geoffrey &, Berger Enzymol. 152: 419 (1987)). The presence of the respective RNA was demonstrated using autoradiography and X-ray films. The analysis demonstrated that the mRNA of clone HOM-RCC-313 was overexpressed in 4 out of 19 renal cell carcinomas compared to normal kidneys. Very weak expression was found only in colonic mucosal tissue and in normal kidney. Expression in other tissues could not be demonstrated.




EXAMPLE 6




To determine the incidence of antibodies against antigens which are identified in accordance with the invention, sera from healthy individuals and tumor patients were analyzed. To this end, the sera were processed as described, supra, and depleted of antibodies against antigens derived from


E. coli


and phages. For the detection of antigen-specific antibodies, phages derived from reactive clones were mixed with non-reactive phages derived from the same cDNA library at a ratio of 1:10 and tested as described supra for reactivity with antibodies in the human test serum. The serum which had been used for the identification of the antigen was used as a positive clone. The non-reactive phages served as a negative control. A serum sample was positive for antigen reactive antibodies, if the expected percentage of the phage plaques showed a positive reaction. In the case of the renal cell carcinoma antigen represented by clone HOM-RCC-313, the analysis of a spectrum of human sera showed that only sera from renal cell carcinoma patients contained reactive antibodies. Sera from healthy controls and patients with other tumors did not contain such antibodies.




The cDNA for clone HOM-RCC-313 was excised from the plasmid DNA by digestion with the restriction enzyme EcoRI, was separated by agarose gel electrophoresis, followed by extraction from the gel. This was then used to create a vector which expresses a fusion protein with the bacterial protein anthranilate synthetase. A relevant fragment in the exact open reading frame was cloned into pATH plasmid vectors (Koerner, Hill, Myers, Tzagaloff, Meth. Enzymol. 194: 477 (1991). Induction of protein expression was obtained after transformation of the plasmids into


E. coli


of strain BL21 as described (Spindler, Rosser, Berk, J. Virol. 49: 132 (1984)). Expressed, fusion proteins were separated by SDS gel electrophoresis, excised from the gel, eluted and freeze dried. Rabbits were immunized by subcutaneous injection with 100 μg of the lyophilisate dissolved in Freund's adjuvant. Immunization was repeated three times at two-week intervals using incomplete Freund's adjuvant. The rabbit was bled and antiserum was obtained. The obtained antiserum was depleted from antibodies reactive with


E. coli


and phages in the manner described supra and tested for reactivity against the renal carcinoma antigen as described for the human serum. Reactivity was detected at dilutions of 1:>100,000.




EXAMPLE 7




The protocols set forth in the preceding examples were followed, using biopsied tissue taken from different subjects suffering from (i) malignant melanoma, (ii) astrocytoma, and (iii) Hodgkin's Disease. Table 1, which follows, summarized the results, including those obtained with the renal cancer study, set out in detail in Examples 1-6, supra.












TABLE 1











Antibody reactivity of autologous sera with recombinant






clones derived from human tumor cDNA. cDNA libraries were






screened with autologous patient serum. Positive clones were






subcloned to monoclonality. Inserts from each clone were amplified






with plasmid primers and separated by agarose gel electrophoresis.






Southern blots were performed by cross hybridization






with the respective inserts.

















clones




positive




different







tumor




tested




clones




inserts











malignant melanoma




1.0 × 10


6






40




10 







renal cell carcinoma




1.8 × 10


6






 7




5







astrocytoma




1.2 × 10


6






49




5







Hodgkin's disease




1.0 × 10


6






14




4















Following the analysis of the different inserts observed, the melanoma cells expressed the known tumor rejection antigen precursor MAGE-1 (see van der Bruggen et al., Science 254: 1643-7 (1991), incorporated by reference), as well as a new antigen. A portion of the CDNA sequence of this antigen is set forth in SEQ ID NO: 2.




When the astrocytoma study was completed, the observed insert corresponded to the previously described Tegt gene (Old, Canc. Res. 41: 361-375 (1981), incorporated by reference).




When the Hodgkin's Disease study was completed, a previously unknown antigen was isolated, and cDNA encoding it was identified in the library, using standard methods. The antigen is a newly observed, lectin-like structure, a portion of the cDNA for which is set forth in SEQ ID NO: 3. Also observed were antibodies against restin, described by Bilbe, et al, EMBO J 11: 2103-13 (1992). This is an intermediate filament associated protein, expression of which has been shown to be restricted to Hodgkin and Reed-Sternberg cells, as well as cultured monocytes.




EXAMPLE 8




A further study of occurrence of antibodies against the antigens described in Examples 1-7 was carried out. Table 2 summarizes these assays. In these studies, phages from positive clones were mixed with non-reactive phage (ratio:1:10) , and then used to transfect bacteria (e. coli). Dilutions of patient sera (1:200), were used, in an enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), as described supra. “HOM-MEL-40” refers to the new melanoma antigen (SEQ ID NO: 2), while “HOM-MEL-55” refers to MAGE-1 (van der Bruggen et al., supra). “HOM-RCC 3.1.3” is the renal cancer antigen of SEQ ID NO: 1. “HOM-GLO-30.2.1” refers to the previously identified astrocytoma associated antigen, “HOM-HD-21” refers to the new, lectin-like antigen of SEQ ID NO: 3, and “HOM-HD-397” is the previously identified restin antigen.












TABLE 2











Humeral immune responses against human tumor antigens. Phages from positive clones were mixed with nonreactive phages of the






cDNA-library at a ratio of 1:10 and used to transfect bacteria. IgG antibodies to the clones were detected with an enzyme-linked assay using






1:200 diluted patient sera.

















antigen





HOM-MEL-55




HOM-ROC-3.1.3*




HOM-GLIO-30.2.1




HOM-HD-21*




HOM-HD-397






identity/homology




HOM-MEL-40*




MAGE-1




CAH-like




tegt




lectin-like




restia









melanoma patients




2/11




4/11




n.t.




n.t.




n.t.




n.t.






rectal cancer patients




0/8 




0/8 




2/14




0/7 




0/7 




 5/7






astrocytoras patients




0/10




0/10




0/11




2/13




0/11




 7/11






Hodgkin's patients




0/10




0/10




0/17




0/17




10/18 




14/17






healthy controls




0/12




0/12




0/15




0/20




0/17




12/17














The fact that antibodies against the tumor antigens, excepting only restin, were detected, albeit at varying rates, only in the sera of patients diseased with the same type of tumor suggests that tumor growth is essential for the development of a humoral response against tumor antigens.




The reason for the presence of restin in healthy controls is not clear. One may speculate that tolerance against respective antigens might be circumvented, because the antigen may have similar sequences to another antigen, the donor may have premalignant cells, or the antigen may be activated in normal cells under non-malignant conditions, such as viral infections, or other inflammatory processes.




EXAMPLE 9




In order to determine the expression pattern of the newly identified antigens described herein, Northern blot analysis was carried out, using a variety of human tissues.




RNA was extracted from tissue samples (tumor and normal) using the well known guanidium isothiocyanate/phenol/chloroform method of Chomzynski, et al., supra. The RNA integrity was checked via electrophoresis in formalin/MOPS gels. Then, gels containing 40 ug of RNA per lane were blotted onto nylon membranes. These Northern blots were then probed with the cDNA of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2 or 3. Hybridization was with


32


p labelled probes at 42° C., with formamide. The filters were washed at 65° C., at 1×SSC, 0.2% SDS, and exposed for 16 hours. These are “stringent conditions” as defined hereafter. After exposure, filters were stripped and rehybridized with GAPDH.




Table 3 summarizes these results.












TABLE 3











Expression pattern of tumor antigens in various tissues (selection). Northern-plot analysis was






performed with RNA samples from tumor and normal human matched by hybridization with






GAPDH. Expression ratios were calculated after densitometric analysis of autoradiographs.






The signal obtained with the normal counterpart of the diseased tissue was set to 1.















antigen





HOM-RCC-3.1.3*




HOM-GLIO-30.2.1




HOM-HD-21*






identity/homology




HOM-MEL-40*




CAH-like




Tegt




Lectin-like


















kidney









1  




1.5











brain









n.t.




1




n.t.






tonsil














1




 1






stomach














1.5











colon mucose









0.2




1.5











breast














1.0











nasal cancer









>5 in 4/19 cases




n.t.













≦1 in 15/19 cases






Hodgkin's tissue




n.t.









n.t.




>10






astrocytoma




n.t.




n.t.




>5 in 8/12














1 in 4/12






melanoma




++









n.t.
















n.t. = not tested;













As will be seen the new melanoma associated antigen is strongly expressed in melanoma, but not other tissues. Carbonic-anhydrase-like antigen was strongly expressed in about 20% of renal cell carcinomas, and only weakly in normal renal tissue. Tegt was overexpressed on 8/12 astrocytoma tissues compared to normal brain tissue. The mRNA for the lectin like molecule associated with Hodgkin's disease was increased about ten fold in diseased tonsils as compared to normal tonsils, suggesting that overexpression may be a frequent characteristic of proteins which elicit autologous B cell responses.




EXAMPLE 10




Further studies were carried out on the HOM-MEL-40 sequence. Using standard genetic analysis techniques, the 5′ region of the mRNA for HOM-MEL 40 was shown to have a tyrosine kinase binding domain. This suggests that HOM-MEL-40 may function as a receptor. The 3′ portion of the RNA is identical with an RNA molecule for “SSX,” a molecule known to be involved in the SYT-SSX translocation in synovial tumors.




EXAMPLE 11




Additional experiments were also carried out to study HOM-MEL 40. Standard Northern blotting showed that, with the exception of testis, HOM-MEL 40 was not expressed in normal tissues. In contrast, it was expressed in 50% of melanomas, 75% of thyroid cancers, 25% of prostate cancers, 20% of gastric cancers, 16% of colorectal cancers, and 12% of the lung cancers tested.




Additional Western blotting work was carried out, showing that antibodies against HOM-MEL 40 were present in 10 of 89 melanoma patients tested, but only 3 out of 49 healthy male subjects.




In yet further studies, it was observed that HLA-A2 positive tumor cells presented a nonamer derived from HOM-MEL. This suggests that HOM-MEL 40 specific vaccines, useful in inducing CTLs, are possible.




As the foregoing shows, the invention relates to a method for determining or isolating an immunoreactive substance. “Immunoreactive substance” as used herein refers to any material which provokes some form of immune response in the subject which produces it. This response may be based upon either a B cell or a T cell response. Such immunoreactive substances include proteins, peptides, glycoproteins, lipoproteins, peptide containing complexes (e.g., MHC/peptide complexes), antibodies, and so forth. To determine such substances, a cDNA library is prepared from cells of a subject, using well known, standard methods. The cDNA is then inserted into an appropriate vector, such as a eukaryotic cell specific virus or a phage (i.e., a bacterial virus), to form a transfecting/transforming library, which is then incorporated into a host cell. The host cells are treated so that they express the library component (cloned cDNA) they receive. The host cells are then lysed, so that the expressed material is available for further treatment.




The lysed material is then contacted with a “stripped” sample believed to contain an immunogenic binding partner for the immunoreactive substance. “Immunogenic binding partner” as used herein refers to any immune system associated material which binds to the target, i.e., the immunoreactive substance. Such binding partners include, but are not limited to, antibodies, T cells, cytokines, ligands, receptors, and so forth, as well as truncated portions of these molecules, complementary nucleic acid molecules, and so forth. Note that for some of these components, such as T cells, further steps including those recited herein are required.




The stripped sample, as indicated supra, has been treated by contact with both (i) non-transfected or transformed host cells, and (ii) host cells transfected or transformed with vectors which do not contain the pertinent cDNA.




The stripped sample is useful for identifying binding partners for the expressed material because many of the immune components which would otherwise interfere with the specific immunological reaction desired have been removed via the absorption steps described herein.




The identification of the expressed material may be followed by isolation of the cDNA encoding it. One can punch holes through a membrane, such as a nitrocellulose membrane placed on top of Petri dishes containing colonies of host cells, then use an immune reaction to give position on the solid phase. Each colony is based upon limited cDNA transfection, thereby facilitating isolation and identification of relevant cDNA.




The invention also relates to the isolated nucleic acid molecules of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2 or 3, which encode for molecules which are associated with particular conditions. In addition to their role as coding materials, these molecule can also be used as probes to identify cells expressing the relevant antigens, as it has been shown that these cDNA molecules (SEQ ID NO: 1, 2 and 3) are based upon mRNA which translated to the antigen.




Also a part of the invention are isolated nucleic acid molecules, the complementary sequences of which hybridize to one of SEQ ID NO: 1, 2 or 3, and which encode a protein equivalent to those encoded by SEQ ID NO: 1, 2 or 3. “Stringent conditions” as used herein, refers to conditions at least as stringent as hybridization at 50 μl/cm


2


of 3.5×SSC, 1×Denhardt's solution, 25 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.0), using a


32


P-labelled probe, for 18 hours at 65° C., followed by four washes (one hour, each wash, at 65° C., 2×SSC, 0.1% SDS), and a final wash for 30 minutes at 1.0×SSC 0.2% SDS. The final wash can be changed to 0.5×SSC to 0.2×SSC, or even 0.1×SSC, and SDS can be lowered to 0.1 to increase stringency, if desired.




Other features of the invention will be clear to the skilled artisan and need not be reiterated here.




The terms and expressions which have been employed are used as terms of description and not of limitation, and there is no intention in the use of such terms and expressions of excluding any equivalents of the features shown and described or portions thereof, it being recognized that various modifications are possible within the scope of the invention.













1




CGCGAAGATG CCCCGGCGCA GCCTGCACGC














GGCGGCCGTG CTCCTGCTGG TGATCTTAAA













61




GGAACAGCCT TCCAGCCCGG CCCCAGTGAA














CGGTTCCAAG TGGACTTATT TTGGTCCTGA













121




TGGGGAGAAT AGCTGGTCCA AGAAGTACCC














GTCGTGTGGG GGCCTGCTGC AGTCCCCCAT













181




AGACCTGCAC AGTGACATCC TCCAGTATGA














CGCCAGCCTC ACGCCCCTCG AGTTCCAAGG













241




CTACAATCTG TCTGCCAACA AGCAGTTTCT














CCTGACCAAC AATGGCCATT CAGTGAAGCT













301




GAACCTGCCC TCGGACATGC ACATCCAGGG














CCTCCAGTCT CGCTACAGTG CCACGCAGCT













361




GCACCTGCAC TGGGGGAACC CGAATGACCC














GCACGGCTCT GAGCATACCG TCAGCGGACA













421




GCACTTCTCC GCCGAGCTGC ACATTGTCCA














TTATAACTCA GACCTTTATC CTGACGACAG













481




NACTGCCAGC AACAAGTCAG AAGACCTCCC














TGTCCTGGGT GCTCTCATTG AGATGGGCTC













541




CTTCAATCCG TCCTATGACA AGATCTTCAG














TCACCTTCAA CATGTAAAGT ACAAAGGCCA













601




GGAAGCATTC GTCCCGGGAT TCAACATTGA














AGAGCTGCTT CCGGAGAGGA CCGCTGAATA













661




TTACCGCTAC CGGGGGTCCC TGATCACACC














CCCTTGCAAC CCCACTGTGC TCTGGACAGT













721




TTTCCGAAAC CCCGTGCAAA TTTCCCAGGA














GCAGCTGCTG GCTTTGGAGA CAGCCCTGTA













781




CTGCACACAC ATGGACGACC CTTCCCCCAG














AGAAATGATC AACAACTTCC GGCAGGTCCA













841




GAAGTTCGAT GAGAGGCTGG TATACACCTC














CTTCTCCCAA GTGCAAGTCT GTACTGCGGC













900




AGGACTGAGT CTGGGCATCA TCCTCTCACT














GGCCCTGGCT GGCATTCTTG GCATCTGTAT













961




TGTGGTGGTG GTGTCCATTT GGCTTTTCAG














AAGGAAGAGT ATCAAAAAAG GTGATAACAA













1021




GGGAGTCATT TACAAGCCAG CCACCAAGAT














GGAGACTGAG GCCCACGCTT GAGGTCCCCG













1081




GAGCTCCCCG GCACATCCAG GAAGGACCTT














GCTTTGGACC CTACACACTT CGGCTCTCTG













1141




GACACTTGCG ACACCTCAAG GTGTTCTCTG














TAGCTCAATC TGCAAACATG CCAGGCCTCA













1201




GGGATCCTCT GCTGGGTGCC TCCTTGTCTT














GGGACCATGG NCACCCCAGA GCCATCCGAT













1261




CGATGGATGG GATGCACTCT CAGACCAAGC














AGCAGGAATT CAAAGCTGCT TGCTGTAATT













1321




GTGTGAGATT GTGAAGTGGT CTGAATTCTG














GAATCACAAA CCAACCATGC TGGTGGGCCA













1381




TTAATGGTTG GAAAACACTT CCATCCGGGG














CTTTGCCAGA GCGTGCTTTC AAGTGTCCTG













1441




GAAATTCTGC TGCTTCTCCA AGCTTTCAGA














CAAGAATGTG CACTCTCTGC TTAGGTTTTG













1501




CTTGGGAAAC TCAACTTCTT TCCTCTGGAG














ACGGGACATC TCCCTCTGAT TTCCTTCTGC













1561




TATGCAAAAC CTTTAATCTG CACCTTACAN














ACTCGGGGAC AAATGGGGAC AGGAAGGATC













1621




AAGTTGTAGA GNAGAAAAAG AAAACAAGAG














ATATACATTG TGATATATAT TAGGGACACT













1681




TTCACAGTCC TGTCCTCTGG ATCACAGACA














CTGCACAGAC CTTAGGGAAA TGGCAGGTTC













1741




AAAGTTCCAC TTCTTGGTGG GGATGAGAAG














GGAGAGAGAG CTAGAGGGAC AAAGAGAATG













1801




AGAAGACATG GATGATCTGG GAGAGTCTCA














CTTCCGAATC AGAATTGGAA TCACATTCTG













1861




TTTATCAAGC CATAATGTAA GGACAGAATA














ATACAATAAT AAGTCCAAAT CCAACCTCCT













1921




GTCAGTGGAA CAGTTATGTT TTATACTCTA














CAGATTTTAC AAATANATGA GGCTNGTTCC













1981




TTGAAAANTG TGTTGNNTTG CTGTNGTCCN














NTGGAGGAGA CATGAGTTCC GAGATGACCA













2041




ACTCNNGCNT TGNATNCTNG GAGGNAATAN














GGCAGAACCA AAATGACTGT AGAACTTATT













2101




CTCTGTAGGC CAAATTTCAT TTCAGCCACT














TCTGCAGGAT CCTACTGCCA ACCTGGAATG













2161




GAGACTTTTA TCTACTTCTC TCTCTCTGAA














GATGTCAAAT CGTGGTTTAG ATCAAATATA













2221




TTTCAAGCTA TAAAAGCAGG AGGTTATCTG














TGCAGGGGGC TGGCATCATG TATTTAGGGG













2281




CAAGTAATAA TGGAATGCTA CTAAGATACT














CCATATTCTT CCCCGAATCA CACAGACAGT













2341




TTCTGACAGG CGCAACTCCT CCATTTTCCT














CCCGCAGGTG AGAACCCTGT GGAGATGAGT













2401




CAGTGCCATG ACTGAGAAGG AACCGACCCC














TAGTTGAGAG CACCTTGCAG TTCCCCGAGA













2461




ACTTTCTGAT TGCACAGTCT CATTTTGACA














GCATGAAATG TCCTCTTGAA GCATAGCTTT













2521




TTAAATATCT TTTTCCTTCT ACTCCTCCCT














CTGACTCTAG GAATTCTCTC TTCTGGAATC













2581




GCTTGAACCC AGGAGGCGGA GGTTGCAGTA














AGCCAAGGTC ATGCCACTGC ACTCTAGCCT













2641




GGGTGACAGA GCGAGACTCC ATCTCAAAAA














AAAAAAAAA//













1




ACTTTCTCTC TCTTTCGATT CTTCCATACT














CAGAGTACGC ACGGTCTGAT TTTCTCTTTG













61




GATTCTTCCA AAATCAGAGT CAGACTGCTC














CCGGTGCCAT GAACGGAGAC GACGCCTTTG













121




CAAGGAGACC CACGGTTGGT GCTCAAATAC














CAGAGAAGAT CCAAAAGGCC TTCGATGATA













181




TTGCCAAATA CTTCTCTAAG GAAGAGTGGG














AAAAGATGAA AGCCTCGGAG AAAATCTTCT













241




ATGTGTATAT GAAGAGAAAG TATGAGGCTA














TGACTAAACT AGGTTTCAAG GCCACCCTCC













301




CACCTTTCAT GTGTAATAAA CGGGCCGAAG














ACTTCCAGGG GAATGATTTG GATAATGACC













361




CTAACCGTGG GAATCAGGTT GAACGTCCTC














AGATGACTTT CGGCAGGCTC CAGGGAATCT













421




CCCCGAAGAT CATGCCCAAG AAGCCAGCAG














AGGAAGGAAA TGATTCGGAG GAAGTGCCAG













481




AAGCATCTGG CCCACAAAAT GATGGGAAAG














AGCTGTGCCC CCCGGGAAAA CCAACTACCT













541




CTGAGAAGAT TCACGAGAGA TCTGGACCCA














AAAGGGGGGA ACATGCCTGG ACCCACAGAC













601




TGCGTGAGAG AAAACAGCTG GTGATTTATG














AAGAGATCAG CGACCCTGAG GAAGATGACG













661




AGTAACTCCC CTCAGGGATA CGACACATGC














CCATGATGAG AAGCAGAACG TGGTGACCTT













721




TCACGAACAT GGGCATGGCT GCGGACCCCT














CGTCATCAGG TCCATAGCAA GTGAAAGCAA













781




GTGTTCACAA CAGTGAAAAG TTGAGCGTCA














TTTTTCTTAG TGTCCCAAGA GTTCGATGTT













841




AGCGTTTACG TTGTATTTTC TTACACTGTG














TCATTCTGTT AGATACTAAC ATTTCATTGA













901




TGACGAAGAC ATACTTAATC GATATTTGGT







T□













1




GATCCCCCGG GCTGCAGGAA TTCGGCACGA














GCAAAGGACT TCCTAGTGGG TGTGAAAGGC













61




AGCGGTGGCC ACAGAGGCGG CGGAGAGATG














GCCTTCAGCG GTTCCCAGGC TCCCTACCTG













121




AGTCCAGCTG TCCCCTTTTC TGGGACTATT














CAAGGAGGTC TCCAGGACGG ACTTCAGATC













181




ACTGTCAATG GGACCGTTCT CAGCTCCAGT














GGAACCAGGT TTGCTGTGAA CTTTCAGACT













241




GGCTTCAGTG GAAATGACAT TGCCTTCCAC














TTCAACCCTC GGTTTGAAGA TGGAGGGTAC













301




TTGGTGTCCA ACACGAGGCA GAACGGAAGC














TGGGGGCCCG AGGAGAGGAA GACACACATG













361




CCTTNCCAGA AGGGGATGCC CTTTGACCTC














TGCTTCCTGG TGCAGAGCTC AGATTTCAAG













421




GTGATGGTGA ACGGGATCCT CTTCGTGCAG














TACTTCACAT CTCGTCATGC CCTGTCCACC













481




GTTGTGGACA CCATCTCCGT CAATGGCTCT














GTGCAGCTGT CCTACATCAG CTTCCAGCCT













541




CCCGGCGTGT GGCCTGCCAA CCCGGCTCCC














ATTACCCAGA CAGNNNTCAT CCACACAGTN













601




GCAGAGCGCC CNCTGGACAG ATGTCTCTAC














TCCCGCCATC CCACCTATGA TGTACCCCCA













661




CCCCGCCTAT CCGATGCCTT TCATCACCAC














CATTCTGGGA GGGCTGTACC CATCCAAGTC













721




CATCCTCCTG TCAGGCACTG TNCTGCCCAG














TGCTCANGAG GTTCCACATC NAACCTGTGC













781




NCTGGGAACC ACATCGCCTT CCACCTGAAC














CCCCGTTTTG ATGAGAATGC TGTGGTCCGC













841




AACACCCAGA TCGACAACTC CTGGGGGTCT














GAGGAGCGAA GTCTGCCCCG AAAAATGCCC













901




TTCGTCCGTG GCCAGAGCTT CTCAGTGTGG














ATCTTGTGTG AAGCTCACTG CCTCAAGGTG













961




GCCGTGGATG GTCAGCACCT GTTTGAATAC














AACCATCGCC TGAGGAACCT GCCCACCATC













1021




AACAGACTGG AAGTGGGGGG CGACATCCAG














CTGACCATGT GCAGACATAG GCGGCTTCCT













1081




GGCCCTGGGG CCGGGGGCTG GGGTGTGGGG














CAGTCTGGGT CCTCTCATCA TCCCCACTTC













1141




CCAGGCCCAG CCTTTCCAAC CCTGCCTGGG














ATCTGGGCTT TAATGCAGAG GCCATGTCCT













1201




TGTCTGGTCC TGCTTCTGGC TACAGCCACC














CTGGAACGGA GAAGGCAGCT GACGGGGATT













1261




GCCTCCTCAG CCGCAGCAGC ACCTGGGGCT














CCAGCTGCTG GAATCCTACC ATCCCAGGAY













1321




GCAGGCACAG CCAGGGAGAG GGGAGGNGTG














GGCAGTGAAG ATGAAGCCCC ATGCTCAGTC













1381




CCCTCCCATC CCCCACGCAG CTCCACCCCA














GTCCCAAGCC ACCAGCTGTC TGCTCCTGGT













1441




GGGAGGTGGC CTCCTCAGCN CCTCCTCTCT














GACCTTTAAC CTNACTCTCA CCTTGCACCG













1501




TGCACCAACC CTTCACCCCT CCTGGAAAGC














AGGCCTGATG GCTTCCCACT GGCCTCCACC













1561




ACCTGACCAG AGTGTTCTCT TCAGAGGACT














GGCTCCTTTC CCAGTGTCCT TAAAATAAAG













1621




AAATGAAAAT NCTTGTTGGC AAAAAAAAAA














AAAAAAAAAC TCGAGGGGGN NCCCNGTACC













1681




CAATTCGCCC TA □
























                  






#              SEQUENCE LIS






#TING




















(1) GENERAL INFORMATION:













   (iii) NUMBER OF SEQUENCES:  4




















(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:1:













     (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:






          (A) LENGTH: 2679 base 






#pairs






          (B) TYPE: nucleic acid






          (C) STRANDEDNESS: double-






#stranded






          (D) TOPOLOGY:  linear













    (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:1:













CGCGAAGATG CCCCGGCGCA GCCTGCACGC GGCGGCCGTG CTCCTGCTGG  






#              50













TGATCTTAAA GGAACAGCCT TCCAGCCCGG CCCCAGTGAA CGGTTCCAAG  






#             100













TGGACTTATT TTGGTCCTGA TGGGGAGAAT AGCTGGTCCA AGAAGTACCC  






#             150













GTCGTGTGGG GGCCTGCTGC AGTCCCCCAT AGACCTGCAC AGTGACATCC  






#             200













TCCAGTATGA CGCCAGCCTC ACGCCCCTCG AGTTCCAAGG CTACAATCTG  






#             250













TCTGCCAACA AGCAGTTTCT CCTGACCAAC AATGGCCATT CAGTGAAGCT  






#             300













GAACCTGCCC TCGGACATGC ACATCCAGGG CCTCCAGTCT CGCTACAGTG  






#             350













CCACGCAGCT GCACCTGCAC TGGGGGAACC CGAATGACCC GCACGGCTCT  






#             400













GAGCATACCG TCAGCGGACA GCACTTCTCC GCCGAGCTGC ACATTGTCCA  






#             450













TTATAACTCA GACCTTTATC CTGACGACAG NACTGCCAGC AACAAGTCAG  






#             500













AAGACCTCGC TGTCCTGGGT GCTCTCATTG AGATGGGCTC CTTCAATCCG  






#             550













TCCTATGACA AGATCTTCAG TCACCTTCAA CATGTAAAGT ACAAAGGCCA  






#             600













GGAAGCATTC GTCCCGGGAT TCAACATTGA AGAGCTGCTT CCGGAGAGGA  






#             650













CCGCTGAATA TTACCGCTAC CGGGGGTCCC TGATCACACC CCCTTGCAAC  






#             700













CCCACTGTGC TCTGGACAGT TTTCCGAAAC CCCGTGCAAA TTTCCCAGGA  






#             750













GCAGCTGCTG GCTTTGGAGA CAGCCCTGTA CTGCACACAC ATGGACGACC  






#             800













CTTCCCCCAG AGAAATGATC AACAACTTCC GGCAGGTCCA GAAGTTCGAT  






#             850













GAGAGGCTGG TATACACCTC CTTCTCCCAA GTGCAAGTCT GTACTGCGGC  






#             900













AGGACTGAGT CTGGGCATCA TCCTCTCACT GGCCCTGGCT GGCATTCTTG  






#             950













GCATCTGTAT TGTGGTGGTG GTGTCCATTT GGCTTTTCAG AAGGAAGAGT  






#            1000













ATCAAAAAAG GTGATAACAA GGGAGTCATT TACAAGCCAG CCACCAAGAT  






#            1050













GGAGACTGAG GCCCACGCTT GAGGTCCCCG GAGCTCCCGG GCACATCCAG  






#            1100













GAAGGACCTT GCTTTGGACC CTACACACTT CGGCTCTCTG GACACTTGCG  






#            1150













ACACCTCAAG GTGTTCTCTG TAGCTCAATC TGCAAACATG CCAGGCCTCA  






#            1200













GGGATCCTCT GCTGGGTGCC TCCTTGTCTT GGGACCATGG NCACCCCAGA  






#            1250













GCCATCCGAT CGATGGATGG GATGCACTCT CAGACCAAGC AGCAGGAATT  






#            1300













CAAAGCTGCT TGCTGTAATT GTGTGAGATT GTGAAGTGGT CTGAATTCTG  






#            1350













GAATCACAAA CCAACCATGC TGGTGGGCCA TTAATGGTTG GAAAACACTT  






#            1400













CCATCCGGGG CTTTGCCAGA GCGTGCTTTC AAGTGTCCTG GAAATTCTGC  






#            1450













TGCTTCTCCA AGCTTTCAGA CAAGAATGTG CACTCTCTGC TTAGGTTTTG  






#            1500













CTTGGGAAAC TCAACTTCTT TCCTCTGGAG ACGGGACATC TCCCTCTGAT  






#            1550













TTCCTTCTGC TATGCAAAAC CTTTAATCTG CACCTTACAN ACTCGGGGAC  






#            1600













AAATGGGGAC AGGAAGGATC AAGTTGTAGA GNAGAAAAAG AAAACAAGAG  






#            1650













ATATACATTG TGATATATAT TAGGGACACT TTCACAGTCC TGTCCTCTGG  






#            1700













ATCACAGACA CTGCACAGAC CTTAGGGAAA TGGCAGGTTC AAAGTTCCAC  






#            1750













TTCTTGGTGG GGATGAGAAG GGAGAGAGAG CTAGAGGGAC AAAGAGAATG  






#            1800













AGAAGACATG GATGATCTGG GAGAGTCTCA CTTCGGAATC AGAATTGGAA  






#            1850













TCACATTCTG TTTATCAAGC CATAATGTAA GGACAGAATA ATACAATAAT  






#            1900













AAGTCCAAAT CCAACCTCCT GTCAGTGGAA CAGTTATGTT TTATACTCTA  






#            1950













CAGATTTTAC AAATANATGA GGCTNGTTCC TTGAAAANTG TGTTGNNTTG  






#            2000













CTGTNGTCCN NTGGAGGAGA CATGAGTTCC GAGATGACCA ACTCNNGCNT  






#            2050













TGNATNCTNG GAGGNAATAN GGCAGAACCA AAATGACTGT AGAACTTATT  






#            2100













CTCTGTAGGC CAAATTTCAT TTCAGCCACT TCTGCAGGAT CCTACTGCCA  






#            2150













ACCTGGAATG GAGACTTTTA TCTACTTCTC TCTCTCTGAA GATGTCAAAT  






#            2200













CGTGGTTTAG ATCAAATATA TTTCAAGCTA TAAAAGCAGG AGGTTATCTG  






#            2250













TGCAGGGGGC TGGCATCATG TATTTAGGGG CAAGTAATAA TGGAATGCTA  






#            2300













CTAAGATACT CCATATTCTT CCCCGAATCA CACAGACAGT TTCTGACAGG  






#            2350













CGCAACTCCT CCATTTTCCT CCCGCAGGTG AGAACCCTGT GGAGATGAGT  






#            2400













CAGTGCCATG ACTGAGAAGG AACCGACCCC TAGTTGAGAG CACCTTGCAG  






#            2450













TTCCCCGAGA ACTTTCTGAT TGCACAGTCT CATTTTGACA GCATGAAATG  






#            2500













TCCTCTTGAA GCATAGCTTT TTAAATATCT TTTTCCTTCT ACTCCTCCCT  






#            2550













CTGACTCTAG GAATTCTCTC TTCTGGAATC GCTTGAACCC AGGAGGCGGA  






#            2600













GGTTGCAGTA AGCCAAGGTC ATGCCACTGC ACTCTAGCCT GGGTGACAGA  






#            2650













GCGAGACTCC ATCTCAAAAA AAAAAAAAA         






#                  






#          2679




















(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:2:













     (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:






          (A) LENGTH: 931 base 






#pairs






          (B) TYPE: nucleic acid






          (C) STRANDEDNESS: double-






#stranded






          (D) TOPOLOGY:  linear













    (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:2:













ACTTTCTCTC TCTTTCGATT CTTCCATACT CAGAGTACGC ACGGTCTGAT  






#              50













TTTCTCTTTG GATTCTTCCA AAATCAGAGT CAGACTGCTC CCGGTGCCAT  






#             100













GAACGGAGAC GACGCCTTTG CAAGGAGACC CACGGTTGGT GCTCAAATAC  






#             150













CAGAGAAGAT CCAAAAGGCC TTCGATGATA TTGCCAAATA CTTCTCTAAG  






#             200













GAAGAGTGGG AAAAGATGAA AGCCTCGGAG AAAATCTTCT ATGTGTATAT  






#             250













GAAGAGAAAG TATGAGGCTA TGACTAAACT AGGTTTCAAG GCCACCCTCC  






#             300













CACCTTTCAT GTGTAATAAA CGGGCCGAAG ACTTCCAGGG GAATGATTTG  






#             350













GATAATGACC CTAACCGTGG GAATCAGGTT GAACGTCCTC AGATGACTTT  






#             400













CGGCAGGCTC CAGGGAATCT CCCCGAAGAT CATGCCCAAG AAGCCAGCAG  






#             450













AGGAAGGAAA TGATTCGGAG GAAGTGCCAG AAGCATCTGG CCCACAAAAT  






#             500













GATGGGAAAG AGCTGTGCCC CCCGGGAAAA CCAACTACCT CTGAGAAGAT  






#             550













TCACGAGAGA TCTGGACCCA AAAGGGGGGA ACATGCCTGG ACCCACAGAC  






#             600













TGCGTGAGAG AAAACAGCTG GTGATTTATG AAGAGATCAG CGACCCTGAG  






#             650













GAAGATGACG AGTAACTCCC CTCAGGGATA CGACACATGC CCATGATGAG  






#             700













AAGCAGAACG TGGTGACCTT TCACGAACAT GGGCATGGCT GCGGACCCCT  






#             750













CGTCATCAGG TGCATAGCAA GTGAAAGCAA GTGTTCACAA CAGTGAAAAG  






#             800













TTGAGCGTCA TTTTTCTTAG TGTGCCAAGA GTTCGATGTT AGCGTTTACG  






#             850













TTGTATTTTC TTACACTGTG TCATTCTGTT AGATACTAAC ATTTCATTGA  






#             900













TGACGAAGAC ATACTTAATC GATATTTGGT T       






#                  






#          931




















(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:3:













     (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:






          (A) LENGTH: 1692 base 






#pairs






          (B) TYPE: nucleic acid






          (C) STRANDEDNESS: double-






#stranded






          (D) TOPOLOGY:  linear













    (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:3:













GATCCCCCGG GCTGCAGGAA TTCGGCACGA GCAAAGGACT TCCTAGTGGG  






#              50













TGTGAAAGGC AGCGGTGGCC ACAGAGGCGG CGGAGAGATG GCCTTCAGCG  






#             100













GTTCCCAGGC TCCCTACCTG AGTCCAGCTG TCCCCTTTTC TGGGACTATT  






#             150













CAAGGAGGTC TCCAGGACGG ACTTCAGATC ACTGTCAATG GGACCGTTCT  






#             200













CAGCTCCAGT GGAACCAGGT TTGCTGTGAA CTTTCAGACT GGCTTCAGTG  






#             250













GAAATGACAT TGCCTTCCAC TTCAACCCTC GGTTTGAAGA TGGAGGGTAC  






#             300













TTGGTGTCCA ACACGAGGCA GAACGGAAGC TGGGGGCCCG AGGAGAGGAA  






#             350













GACACACATG CCTTNCCAGA AGGGGATGCC CTTTGACCTC TGCTTCCTGG  






#             400













TGCAGAGCTC AGATTTCAAG GTGATGGTGA ACGGGATCCT CTTCGTGCAG  






#             450













TACTTCACAT CTCGTCATGC CCTGTCCACC GTTGTGGACA CCATCTCCGT  






#             500













CAATGGCTCT GTGCAGCTGT CCTACATCAG CTTCCAGCCT CCCGGCGTGT  






#             550













GGCCTGCCAA CCCGGCTCCC ATTACCCAGA CAGNNNTCAT CCACACAGTN  






#             600













GCAGAGCGCC CNCTGGACAG ATGTCTCTAC TCCCGCCATC CCACCTATGA  






#             650













TGTACCCCCA CCCCGCCTAT CCGATGCCTT TCATCACCAC CATTCTGGGA  






#             700













GGGCTGTACC CATCCAAGTC CATCCTCCTG TCAGGCACTG TNCTGCCCAG  






#             750













TGCTCANGAG GTTCCACATC NAACCTGTGC NCTGGGAACC ACATCGCCTT  






#             800













CCACCTGAAC CCCCGTTTTG ATGAGAATGC TGTGGTCCGC AACACCCAGA  






#             850













TCGACAACTC CTGGGGGTCT CAGGAGCGAA GTCTGCCCCG AAAAATGCCC  






#             900













TTCGTCCGTG GCCAGAGCTT CTCAGTGTGG ATCTTGTGTG AAGCTCACTG  






#             950













CCTCAAGGTG GCCGTGGATG GTCAGCACCT GTTTGAATAC AACCATCGCC  






#            1000













TGAGGAACCT GCCCACCATC AACAGACTGG AAGTGGGGGG CGACATCCAG  






#            1050













CTGACCATGT GCAGACATAG GCGGCTTCCT GGCCCTGGGG CCGGGGGCTG  






#            1100













GGGTGTGGGG CAGTCTGGGT CCTCTCATCA TCCCCACTTC CCAGGCCCAG  






#            1150













CCTTTCCAAC CCTGCCTGGG ATCTGGGCTT TAATGCAGAG GCCATGTCCT  






#            1200













TGTCTGGTCC TGCTTCTGGC TACAGCCACC CTGGAACGGA GAAGGCAGCT  






#            1250













GACGGGGATT GCCTCCTCAG CCGCAGCAGC ACCTGGGGCT CCAGCTGCTG  






#            1300













GAATCCTACC ATCCCAGGAY GCAGGCACAG CCAGGGAGAG GGGAGGNGTG  






#            1350













GGCAGTGAAG ATGAAGCCCC ATGCTCAGTC CCCTCCCATC CCCCACGCAG  






#            1400













CTCCACCCCA GTCCCAAGCC ACCAGCTGTC TGCTCCTGGT GGGAGGTGGC  






#            1450













CTCCTCAGCN CCTCCTCTCT GACCTTTAAC CTNACTCTCA CCTTGCACCG  






#            1500













TGCACCAACC CTTCACCCCT CCTGGAAAGC AGGCCTGATG GCTTCCCACT  






#            1550













GGCCTCCACC ACCTGACCAG AGTGTTCTCT TCAGAGGACT GGCTCCTTTC  






#            1600













CCAGTGTCCT TAAAATAAAG AAATGAAAAT NCTTGTTGGC AAAAAAAAAA  






#            1650













AAAAAAAAAC TCGAGGGGCN NCCCNGTACC CAATTCGCCC TA    






#                  






#1692




















(2) INFORMATION FOR SEQ ID NO:4:













     (i) SEQUENCE CHARACTERISTICS:






          (A) LENGTH: 1190 base 






#pairs






          (B) TYPE: nucleic acid






          (C) STRANDEDNESS: double-






#stranded






          (D) TOPOLOGY:  linear













    (xi) SEQUENCE DESCRIPTION: SEQ ID NO:4:













ATCTGCAGAA TTCGGCTTCG ATCTAGAACT AGTGGATCCC CCGGGCTGCA  






#              50













GGAATTCGGC ACGAGCGGTT CCAAGTGGAC TTATTTTGGT CCTGATGGGG  






#             100













AGAATAGCTG GTCCAAGAAG TACCCGTCGT GTGGGGGCCT GCTGCAGTCC  






#             150













CCCATAGACC TGCACAGTGA CATCCTCCAG TATGACGCCA GCCTCACGCC  






#             200













CCTCGAGTTC CAAGGCTACA ATCTGTCTGC CAACAAGCAG TTTCTCCTGA  






#             250













CCAACAATGG CCATTCAGTG AAGCTGAACC TGCCCTCGGA CATGCACATC  






#             300













CAGGGCCTCC AGTCTCGCTA CAGTGCCACG CAGCTGCACC TGCACTGGGG  






#             350













GAACCCGAAT GACCCGCACG GCTCTGAGCA TACCGTCAGC GGACAGCACT  






#             400













TCTCCGCCGA GCTGCACATT GTCCATTATA ACTCAGACCT TTATCCTGAC  






#             450













GACAGNACTG CCAGCAACAA GTCAGAAGAC CTCGCTGTCC TGGGTGCTCT  






#             500













CATTGAGATG GGCTCCTTCA ATCCGTCCTA TGACAAGATC TTCAGTCACC  






#             550













TTCAACATGT AAAGTACAAA GGCCAGGAAG CATTCGTCCC GGGATTCAAC  






#             600













ATTGAAGAGC TGCTTCCGGA GAGGACCGCT GAATATTACC GCTACCGGGG  






#             650













GTCCCTGATC ACACCCCCTT GCAACCCCAC TGTGCTCTGG ACAGTTTTCC  






#             700













GAAACCCCGT GCAAATTTCC CAGGAGCAGC TGCTGGCTTT GGAGACAGCC  






#             750













CTGTACTGCA CACACATGGA CGACCCTTCC CCCAGAGAAA TGATCAACAA  






#             800













CTNCCGGCAG GTCCAGAAGT TCGNTGAGAG GCTGGTATAC ACCTCCTTCT  






#             850













CNCAAGTGCA AGTCTGTACT GCGGCAGGAC TGAGTCTGGG CATCATCCTC  






#             900













TCACTGGCCC TGGCTGGCAT TCTTGGCATC TGTATTGTGG TGGTGGTGTC  






#             950













CATTTGGCTT TTCAGAAGGA AGAGTANCCC CNAAAGGTGA TAACAAGGGA  






#            1000













GTCATTTACA AGCCANCCAC CAAGATGGAG ACTGAGGCCC ACGCTTGAGG  






#            1050













TCCCCGGAGC TCCCGGGCAC ATCCAGGAAG GACCTTGCTT TTGGACCCTA  






#            1100













CACACTTCGG CTCTCTGGAC ACTTGCGACA CCTCAAGGTG TTCTCTGTAG  






#            1150













CTCAATCTGC AAACATGCCA GGCCTCAGGG ATCCTCTGCT     






#                  






#  1190













Claims
  • 1. A method for determining differential expression of the nucleotide sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1 in a renal cell carcinoma as compared to normal renal tissue comprising: (a) contacting a kidney cell containing sample with an isolated nucleic acid molecule, which is the complete complement of the nucleotide sequence set forth at SEQ ID NO: 1, at 42° C., followed by washing at 65° C., 1×SSC, 0.2% SDS, determining hybridization between said isolated nucleic acid molecule and the nucleic acid molecule the sequence of which is set forth at SEQ ID NO: 1 and comparing said hybridization to (b) hybridization of said isolated mucleic acid molecule to SEQ ID NO: 1 in a normal kidney cell sample at 42° C., followed by washing at 65° C., 1×SSC, 0.2% SDS, wherein an increased degree of hybridization in (a) as compared to (b) is indicative of renal cancer in said kidney cell sample.
  • 2. The method of claim 1, wherein said method is a Northern Blot assay.
  • 3. The method of claim 1, wherein said kidney cell sample is a human kidney cell sample, and said normal kidney cell sample is a normal human kidney cell sample.
RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a divisional of application Ser. No. 08/959,625, filed Oct. 28, 1997, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,017,716, which is a divisional of application Ser. No. 08/580,980, filed on Jan. 3, 1996, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,025,191, which is a continuations in part of application Ser. No. 08/479,328, filed on Jun. 7, 1995, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,698,396.

US Referenced Citations (1)
Number Name Date Kind
5773579 Torcznski et al. Jun 1998 A
Foreign Referenced Citations (1)
Number Date Country
200073509 Dec 2000 WO
Non-Patent Literature Citations (12)
Entry
Alberts et al (Molecular Biology of the Cell, 3rd Ed., 1994, p. 465).*
Shantz and Pegg (Int. J. of Blochem and Cell Blol., 1999, 31:107-122).*
McClean and Hill (eur. J. of Cancer, 1993, 29A:2243-2248).*
Fu et al (EMBO J., 1996, 15:4392-4401).*
Yokotoa et al (Oncogene, 1988, 3:471-475).*
Dias et al, Genbank Sequence Database (Acession BE 162000.1), National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD, Jun. 21, 1000).*
Kennel (Progr. Nucl. Acid Res. Mol. Biol., 1971, 11:259-301).*
NIH-MGC, Genbank Sequence Database (Acession BE873049) Center for Biotechnology Information, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD, Oct. 20, 2000).*
Oto et al Genbank Sequence Database (Acession AU 143438) National Center for Biotechnology Information National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD, Oct. 25, 2000).*
NIH-MGC, Genbank Sequence Database (Acession BE873049), Center for Biotechnology Information, National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, MD, Oct. 20, 2000).*
Oto et al, Genbank Sequence Database (Acession AU 143438), National Center for Biotechnology Information, National Llbrary of Medicine, Bethesda, MD. Oct. 25, 2000.*
Dias et al (PNAS, 2000, 97:3491-3496).
Continuation in Parts (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 08/479328 Jun 1995 US
Child 08/580980 US