| Literature DB >> 19428867 |
Kent A Smith1, Victor L Tam, Raymond M Wong, Robb R Pagarigan, Brenna L Meisenburg, Diljeet K Joea, Xiping Liu, Christiana Sanders, David Diamond, Thomas M Kündig, Zhiyong Qiu, Adrian Bot.
Abstract
DNA vaccines or peptides are capable of inducing specific immunity; however, their translation to the clinic has generally been problematic, primarily due to the reduced magnitude of immune response and poor pharmacokinetics. Herein, we demonstrate that a novel immunization strategy, encompassing sequential exposure of the lymph node milieu to plasmid and peptide in a heterologous prime-boost fashion, results in considerable MHC class I-restricted immunity in mice. Plasmid-primed antigen expression was essential for the generation of a population of central memory T cells, expressing CD62L and low in PD-1, with substantial capability to expand and differentiate to peripheral memory and effector cells, following subsequent exposure to peptide. These vaccine-induced T cells dominated the T cell repertoire, were able to produce large amounts of chemokines and pro-inflammatory cytokines, and recognized tumor cells effectively. In addition to outlining a feasible and effective method to transform plasmid DNA vaccination into a potentially viable immunotherapeutic approach for cancer, this study sheds light on the mechanism of heterologous prime-boost and the considerable heterogeneity of MHC class I-restricted T cell responses.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19428867 DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2009.02.038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccine ISSN: 0264-410X Impact factor: 3.641