Immunotherapy represents a therapeutic option for subgroups of paediatric patients with leukaemia who, despite the impressing advances of the last decades in the field, still show a poor prognosis because of high risk-disease or relapse. A deeper understanding of how the immune system physiologically recognizes and eradicates tumour cells is mandatory. Peptidic antigens are of great interest in the field of immunotherapy because they could be used as vaccines to boost immunity. TEL/AML1 mutant protein, whose sequence is known, is the result of a balanced t(12;21) translocation which generates a fusion gene. Peptides can be artificially synthetized from TEL/AML1 fusion protein and their HLA-binding capacity and immunogenicity can be pr...