Abstract

In this study, a human melanoma vaccine induced antibody responses in mice that varied significantly from animal to animal. BALB/c mice were immunized to a xenogenic human polyvalent melanoma vaccine that has been used in phase II clinical trials in over 600 patients. Mice were bled biweekly for up to 6 weeks to measure antibody responses. IgG antibody responses to the melanoma vaccine components were detectable within 2 weeks but were much stronger at 4 and 6 weeks. When the pooled sera were further analyzed by Western blot, a complex pattern of antigens was detected. When individual sera from identically immunized mice were assayed by Western blot, a consistent, reproducible pattern of antigen recognition was not seen. Rather, we found significantly different antibody responses among the mice. Both the intensity of antibody responses and the pattern of antigens recognized varied from animal to animal. Although there appeared to be immunodominant antigens that produced antibody responses in most mice, no single antigen induced antibody responses in all mice. These results demonstrate that polyvalent vaccines induce heterogeneous antibody responses in mice treated identically. Analysis of the response of selected melanoma patients immunized to the same vaccine revealed similar antibody responses to the antigens in the melanoma vaccine. Heterogeneity may hamper interpretation of vaccine immunogenicity and relevant tumor antigens in humans.

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