Literature DB >> 17619750

WT1 peptide cancer vaccine for patients with hematopoietic malignancies and solid cancers.

Yoshihiro Oka1, Akihiro Tsuboi, Olga A Elisseeva, Hiroko Nakajima, Fumihiro Fujiki, Manabu Kawakami, Toshiaki Shirakata, Sumiyuki Nishida, Naoki Hosen, Yusuke Oji, Ichiro Kawase, Haruo Sugiyama.   

Abstract

Wild-type Wilms' tumor gene WT1 is expressed at a high level in hematopoietic malignancies including acute leukemia, chronic myelogenous leukemia, and myelodysplastic syndromes, as well as in various kinds of solid cancers. Human cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs), which could specifically lyse WT1-expressing tumor cells with HLA class I restriction, were generated in vitro. It was also demonstrated that mice immunized with the WT1 peptide rejected challenges by WT1-expressing cancer cells and survived with no signs of autoaggression to normal organs that physiologically expressed WT1. Furthermore, we and others detected IgM and IgG WT1 antibodies in patients with hematopoietic malignancies, indicating that the WT1 protein was highly immunogenic, and that immunoglobulin class-switch-inducing, WT1-specific, cellular immune responses were elicited in these patients. CD8+ WT1-specific CTLs were also detected in peripheral blood or tumor-draining lymph nodes of cancer patients. These results provided us with the rationale for elicitation of CTL responses targeting the WT1 product for cancer immunotherapy. On the basis of these findings, we performed a phase I clinical trial of a WT1 peptide cancer vaccine for the patients with malignant neoplasms. These results strongly suggested that the WT1 peptide cancer vaccine had efficacy in the clinical setting because clinical responses, including reduction of leukemic blast cells or regression of tumor masses, were observed after the WT1 vaccination in patients with hematopoietic malignancies or solid cancers. The power of a tumor-associated-antigen (TAA)-derived cancer vaccine may be enhanced in combination with stronger adjuvants, helper peptide, molecular-target-based drugs, or some chemotherapy drugs, such as gemcitabine, which has been revealed to suppress regulatory T-cell function. In contrast, reduction of WT1 peptide dose may be needed for the treatment of patients with hematological stem cell diseases, because rapid and strong destruction of malignant cell-sustained hematopoiesis before recovery of normal hematopoiesis may lead to pancytopenia in these patients.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17619750      PMCID: PMC5901323          DOI: 10.1100/tsw.2007.119

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ScientificWorldJournal        ISSN: 1537-744X


  8 in total

1.  Induction of antigen-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes by using monocyte-derived DCs transfected with in vitro-transcribed WT1 or SART1 mRNA.

Authors:  Miwako Narita; Nozomi Tochiki; Anri Saitoh; Norihiro Watanabe; Masami Kaji; Noriyuki Satoh; Akie Yamahira; Takeshi Nakamura; Masayoshi Masuko; Tatsuo Furukawa; Ken Toba; Ichiro Fuse; Yoshifusa Aizawa; Masuhiro Takahashi
Journal:  Med Oncol       Date:  2008-12-05       Impact factor: 3.064

2.  Preclinical development of HIvax: Human survivin highly immunogenic vaccines.

Authors:  Peter R Hoffmann; Maddalena Panigada; Elisa Soprana; Frances Terry; Ivo Sah Bandar; Andrea Napolitano; Aaron H Rose; Fukun W Hoffmann; Lishomwa C Ndhlovu; Mahdi Belcaid; Lenny Moise; Anne S De Groot; Michele Carbone; Giovanni Gaudino; Takashi Matsui; Antonio Siccardi; Pietro Bertino
Journal:  Hum Vaccin Immunother       Date:  2015       Impact factor: 3.452

3.  An immunogenic WT1-derived peptide that induces T cell response in the context of HLA-A*02:01 and HLA-A*24:02 molecules.

Authors:  Tao Dao; Tatyana Korontsvit; Victoria Zakhaleva; Casey Jarvis; Patrizia Mondello; Claire Oh; David A Scheinberg
Journal:  Oncoimmunology       Date:  2016-12-07       Impact factor: 8.110

4.  Therapeutic bispecific T-cell engager antibody targeting the intracellular oncoprotein WT1.

Authors:  Tao Dao; Dmitry Pankov; Andrew Scott; Tatyana Korontsvit; Victoriya Zakhaleva; Yiyang Xu; Jingyi Xiang; Su Yan; Manuel Direito de Morais Guerreiro; Nicholas Veomett; Leonid Dubrovsky; Michael Curcio; Ekaterina Doubrovina; Vladimir Ponomarev; Cheng Liu; Richard J O'Reilly; David A Scheinberg
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2015-09-21       Impact factor: 54.908

5.  Targeting the intracellular WT1 oncogene product with a therapeutic human antibody.

Authors:  Tao Dao; Su Yan; Nicholas Veomett; Dmitry Pankov; Liang Zhou; Tatyana Korontsvit; Andrew Scott; Joseph Whitten; Peter Maslak; Emily Casey; Taochao Tan; Hong Liu; Victoria Zakhaleva; Michael Curcio; Ekaterina Doubrovina; Richard J O'Reilly; Cheng Liu; David A Scheinberg
Journal:  Sci Transl Med       Date:  2013-03-13       Impact factor: 17.956

Review 6.  Modern approaches to treating chronic myelogenous leukemia.

Authors:  Javier Pinilla-Ibarz; Celeste Bello
Journal:  Curr Oncol Rep       Date:  2008-09       Impact factor: 5.075

7.  Development of a Wilms' tumor antigen-specific T-cell receptor for clinical trials: engineered patient's T cells can eliminate autologous leukemia blasts in NOD/SCID mice.

Authors:  Shao-An Xue; Liquan Gao; Sharyn Thomas; Daniel P Hart; John Zhao Xue; Roopinder Gillmore; Ralf-Holger Voss; Emma Morris; Hans J Stauss
Journal:  Haematologica       Date:  2009-08-13       Impact factor: 9.941

8.  Acute multiple organ failure in adult mice deleted for the developmental regulator Wt1.

Authors:  You-Ying Chau; David Brownstein; Heidi Mjoseng; Wen-Chin Lee; Natalija Buza-Vidas; Claus Nerlov; Sten Eirik Jacobsen; Paul Perry; Rachel Berry; Anna Thornburn; David Sexton; Nik Morton; Peter Hohenstein; Elisabeth Freyer; Kay Samuel; Rob van't Hof; Nicholas Hastie
Journal:  PLoS Genet       Date:  2011-12-22       Impact factor: 5.917

  8 in total

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