The precise molecular basis of anti-tumor immunity is not yet fully understood, although commensal Bifidobacterium (c-BIF) is expected to be one of the key players in cancer control via antigenic mimicry. We investigated the sequence similarity between c-BIF and cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) epitope peptides against human tumor-associated antigens to better understand the molecular basis of antigenic mimicry. We used two different similarity analyses for this purpose, a linear sequence analysis and a similarity analysis of T cell receptor (TCR)-mediated recognition of CTL epitope peptides on antigen-presenting cells. The linear sequence analysis revealed 3,900 positive numbers of similarity sites between them with 126 mean per peptide and 107 median per peptide, while the TCR-mediated recognition analysis revealed 5,018 positive numbers with a mean of 162 and median of 132 per peptide. These results demonstrated the existence of durable and abundant sequence similarities between c-BIF and CTL epitope peptides, suggesting that the former play a pivotal in inducing cellular and humoral immunity against the latter in the absence of cancer cells via antigenic mimicry.