| Literature DB >> 31010714 |
Diane M Da Silva1, Joseph G Skeate2, Elena Chavez-Juan3, Kim P Lühen3, Jiun-Ming Wu4, Chia-Mao Wu4, W Martin Kast5, KinKai Hwang6.
Abstract
Persistent human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is causally linked to the development of several human cancers, including cervical, vulvar, vaginal, anal, penile, and oropharyngeal cancers. To address the need for a therapeutic vaccine against HPV-associated diseases, here we test and compare the immunogenicity and therapeutic efficacy of a bacterial exotoxin fusion protein covalently linked to the HPV16 E7 oncoprotein adjuvanted with CpG or GPI-0100 in the C3.43 preclinical HPV16-transformed tumor model. We show that TVGV-1 protein vaccine adjuvanted with either CpG or GPI-0100 adjuvant induces a high frequency of E7-specific CD8+ T cells, and both adjuvants are able to assist the immune response in inducing polyfunctional cytokine-secreting lytic T cells that show therapeutic efficacy against well-established C3.43 tumors. CpG-adjuvanted TVGV-1 resulted in higher frequencies of IFNγ secreting and degranulating E7-specific T cells compared to GPI-0100-adjuvanted TVGV-1, resulting in marginally increased in vivo efficacy. Despite minor differences in immune response outcomes, we consider both CpG ODN and GPI-0100 to be promising vaccine adjuvants to increase the immunogenicity and therapeutic efficacy of the TVGV-1 protein for HPV16-driven cancers.Entities:
Keywords: CpG adjuvant; GPI-0100 adjuvant; HPV16-induced tumors; Human papillomavirus; Therapeutic vaccine
Year: 2019 PMID: 31010714 PMCID: PMC6586561 DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2019.04.043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vaccine ISSN: 0264-410X Impact factor: 3.641