Literature DB >> 24018273

Comparison of vaccine-induced effector CD8 T cell responses directed against self- and non-self-tumor antigens: implications for cancer immunotherapy.

Sara R Pedersen1, Maria R Sørensen, Søren Buus, Jan P Christensen, Allan R Thomsen.   

Abstract

It is generally accepted that CD8 T cells play a major role in tumor control, yet vaccination aimed at eliciting potent CD8 T cell responses are rarely efficient in clinical trials. To try and understand why this is so, we have generated potent adenoviral vectors encoding the endogenous tumor Ags (TA) tyrosinase-related protein-2 (TRP-2) and glycoprotein 100 (GP100) tethered to the invariant chain (Ii). Using these vectors, we sought to characterize the self-TA-specific CD8 T cell response and compare it to that induced against non-self-Ags expressed from a similar vector platform. Prophylactic vaccination with adenoviral vectors expressing either TRP-2 (Ad-Ii-TRP-2) or GP100 (Ad-Ii-GP100) had little or no effect on the growth of s.c. B16 melanomas, and only Ad-Ii-TRP-2 was able to induce a marginal reduction of B16 lung metastasis. In contrast, vaccination with a similar vector construct expressing a foreign (viral) TA induced efficient tumor control. Analyzing the self-TA-specific CD8 T cells, we observed that these could be activated to produce IFN-γ and TNF-α. In addition, surface expression of phenotypic markers and inhibitory receptors, as well as in vivo cytotoxicity and degranulation capacity matched that of non-self-Ag-specific CD8 T cells. However, the CD8 T cells specific for self-TAs had a lower functional avidity, and this impacted on their in vivo performance. On the basis of these results and a low expression of the targeted TA epitopes on the tumor cells, we suggest that low avidity of the self-TA-specific CD8 T cells may represent a major obstacle for efficient immunotherapy of cancer.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 24018273     DOI: 10.4049/jimmunol.1300555

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Immunol        ISSN: 0022-1767            Impact factor:   5.422


  27 in total

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Review 8.  Engineering opportunities in cancer immunotherapy.

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Review 9.  Therapeutic cancer vaccines.

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Authors:  Curtis A Clark; Harshita B Gupta; Gangadhara Sareddy; Srilakshmi Pandeswara; Shunhua Lao; Bin Yuan; Justin M Drerup; Alvaro Padron; José Conejo-Garcia; Kruthi Murthy; Yang Liu; Mary Jo Turk; Kathrin Thedieck; Vincent Hurez; Rong Li; Ratna Vadlamudi; Tyler J Curiel
Journal:  Cancer Res       Date:  2016-09-26       Impact factor: 12.701

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