| Literature DB >> 23675574 |
Cristina Marchini1, Cristina Kalogris, Chiara Garulli, Lucia Pietrella, Federico Gabrielli, Claudia Curcio, Elena Quaglino, Federica Cavallo, Augusto Amici.
Abstract
The crucial role of HER2 in epithelial transformation and its selective overexpression on cancer tissues makes it an ideal target for cancer immunotherapies such as passive immunotherapy with Trastuzumab. There are, however, a number of concerns regarding the use of monoclonal antibodies which include resistance, repeated treatments, considerable costs, and side effects that make active immunotherapies against HER2 desirable alternative approaches. The efficacy of anti-HER2 DNA vaccination has been widely demonstrated in transgenic cancer-prone mice, which recapitulate several features of human breast cancers. Nonetheless, the rational design of a cancer vaccine able to trigger a long-lasting immunity, and thus prevent tumor recurrence in patients, would require the understanding of how tolerance and immunosuppression regulate antitumor immune responses and, at the same time, the identification of the most immunogenic portions of the target protein. We herein retrace the findings that led to our most promising DNA vaccines that, by encoding human/rat chimeric forms of HER2, are able to circumvent peripheral tolerance. Preclinical data obtained with these chimeric DNA vaccines have provided the rationale for their use in an ongoing Phase I clinical trial (EudraCT 2011-001104-34).Entities:
Keywords: DNA vaccines; HER2; breast cancer; immunological tolerance; immunotherapy
Year: 2013 PMID: 23675574 PMCID: PMC3653119 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2013.00122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Maps of anti-HER2 DNA vaccines. pVAX1 (3.0 kb) (Invitrogen) was used as a backbone. The vectors contain the following elements: human cytomegalovirus immediate-early (CMV) promoter (green) for high-level expression in a wide range of mammalian cells; bovine growth hormone (BGH) polyadenylation signal (yellow) for efficient transcription termination and the polyadenylation of mRNA; kanamycin resistance gene (purple) for selection in E. coli; and the origin of bacterial replication (pUC ori, light blue). pVAX-EC-TM (A): the cDNA (about 2 kb) that encodes the extracellular (EC) and transmembrane (TM) domains of rat HER2 was cloned into pVAX1 using HindIII and XbaI restriction enzymes. pVAX-EC4-TM (B): the cDNA that encodes a truncated form of rat HER2, which displays an EC domain that was shortened by 310 NH2-terminal residues and a TM domain, was inserted into pVAX1 using EcoRI and XbaI restriction enzymes, downstream of the leader sequence that had been previously cloned with HindIII and EcoRI. RHuT (C): rat cDNA that encodes the 410 NH2-terminal residues of HER2 was cloned into pVAX1 using HindIII and BstEII restriction enzymes upstream of the human cDNA that encodes the remaining residues of the EC and the TM domains previously cloned using BstEII and XbaI restriction enzymes. pVAX-EC-TM-siRNA (D): a silencing module, which generates a short hairpin (sh)RNA under the control of a polymerase III promoter was inserted into pVAX-EC-TM. The interference cassette is composed of the pH1 or pU6 promoter upstream of an insert that specifies a 19–21-nt sequence derived from the target transcript, separated by a short spacer (6–9 nt) from the reverse complement of the same 19–21 nt sequence.
Figure 2Identification of relevant conformational epitopes on the HER2 oncoprotein by LFPD. LFPD structure (A). The EC domain of rat HER2 was divided into 11 fragments of 106 amino acids: 6 contiguous core fragments + 5 fragments that overlap the previous ones. Screening of sera from mice vaccinated with EC-TM plasmid by an ELISA assay based on LFPD (B). Both sera from BALB/c (blue line) and BALB-neuT (red line) mice recognized rat1 (1–106 aa), rat2 (107–216 aa), rat9 (267–376 aa), and rat11 (487–596 aa) conformational epitopes, although tolerant mice sera showed lower reactivity. Sera from mice vaccinated with a truncated form of HER2 (EC4-TM) recognized rat6 (547–656 aa), rat9, and rat11 fragments (orange line). Pepito based analysis of rat HER2 (C). Red zones indicate the maximum probability of finding a conformational epitope. Adapted from Gabrielli et al. (2013).