| Literature DB >> 35454873 |
Pauline Le Vu1, Jayakumar Vadakekolathu1,2, Sarra Idri1, Holly Nicholls1, Manon Cavaignac1, Stephen Reeder1, Masood A Khan3, Dennis Christensen4, Alan Graham Pockley1,2, Stéphanie E McArdle1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Current treatments for castrate (hormone)-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) remain limited and are not curative, with a median survival from diagnosis of 23 months. The PAP-specific Sipuleucel-T vaccine, which was approved by the FDA in 2010, increases the Overall Survival (OS) by 4 months, but is extremely expensive. We have previously shown that a 15 amino accid (AA) PAP sequence-derived peptide could induce strong immune responses and delay the growth of murine TRAMP-C1 prostate tumors. We have now substituted one amino acid and elongated the sequence to include epitopes predicted to bind to several additional HLA haplotypes. Herein, we present the immunological properties of this 42mer-mutated PAP-derived sequence (MutPAP42mer).Entities:
Keywords: CAF®09; Dextramer™; HHDII/DR1 mice; PBMC; castrate (hormone)-resistant PCa (CRPC); immunotherapy; prostate cancer; prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP)
Year: 2022 PMID: 35454873 PMCID: PMC9032647 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14081970
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.575
Most recent clinical trials of PCa immunotherapeutics.
| Status | Clinical | Interventions | Phase |
|---|---|---|---|
| Recruiting | NCT04071236 | Drug: Avelumab | Phase 1 |
| Completed | NCT00861614 | Drug: Ipilimumab | Phase 3 |
| Completed | NCT01057810 | Drug: Ipilimumab | Phase 3 |
| Recruiting | NCT03651271 | Biological: Nivolumab Monotherapy | Phase 2 |
| Active, but not recruiting | NCT03815942 | Biological: ChAdOx1-MVA 5T4 vaccine | Phase 1 |
| Study discontinued due to drug supply issues; no analysis performed, or meaningful data derived. | NCT01420965 | Drug: CT-011 (PD1 Antibody) | Phase 2 |
| Active, but not recruiting | NCT03177460 | Biological: Daratumumab (CD38 antibody) | Phase 1 |
| Recruiting | NCT03805594 | Drug: Lu-177-PSMA-617 | Phase 1 |
| Recruiting | NCT04597411 | Radiation: 225-Ac-PSMA-617 | Phase 1 |
| Active, but not recruiting | NCT01867333 | Biological: PROSTVAC-F/TRICOM | Phase2 |
| Terminated due to | NCT00133224 | Biological: Immunotherapy allogeneic GM-CSF secreting cellular vaccine (GVAX) | Phase 3 |
| Terminated based on analysis showing <30% chance of patients meeting primary endpoint | NCT00089856 | Biological: Imunotherapy with allogeneic prostate vaccine (GVAX) | Phase 3 |
| Completed | NCT02234921 | Drug: Cyclophosphamide | Phase 1 |
| Completed | NCT00140348 | Biological: Immunotherapy allogeneic GM-CSF secreting cellular vaccine | Phase 1 |
| Completed | NCT00140400 | Biological: Immunotherapy Allogeneic GM-CSF secreting cellular vaccine | Phase 1 |
| Recruiting | NCT03518606 | Drug: Durvalumab + Tremelimumab + metronomic Vinorelbine | Phase 1 |
| Recruiting | NCT03493945 | Biological: M7824 (bifunctional anti-PD-L1/TGFβ Trap fusion protein) | Phase 1 |
| Completed | NCT03384316 | Biological: ETBX-051; adenoviral brachyury vaccine | Phase 1 |
| Active, but not recruiting | NCT02740985 | Drug: AZD4635 | Phase 1 |
| Recruiting | NCT04514484 | Drug: Cabozantinib S-malate | Phase 1 |
| Recruiting | NCT03217747 | Biological: OX40 Antibody PF-04518600 | Phase 1 |
| Recruiting | NCT01095848 | Biological: DPX-0907 consists of 7 tumor-specific HLA-A2-restricted peptides, a universal T Helper peptide, a polynucleotide adjuvant, a liposome, and Montanide ISA51 VG | Phase 1 |
| Recruiting | NCT03315871 | Biological: PROSTVAC-V | Phase 2 |
| Completed | NCT03412786 | Bcl-Xl_42-CAF09b vaccine | Phase 1 |
| Completed | NCT02232230 | Drug: PROVENGE® | Phase 2 |
| Completed | NCT00283829 | Drug: docetaxel | Phase 1 |
| Completed | NCT02692976 | Biological: mDC vaccination | Phase 2 |
| Recruiting | NCT01436968 | Biological: Aglatimagene besadenovec + valacyclovir | Phase 3 |
| Active, but not recruiting | NCT03879122 | Drug: Ipilimumab 5 MG/ML | Phase 2 |
| Active, but not recruiting | NCT01867333 | Biological: PROSTVAC-F/TRICOM | Phase 2 |
Clinical information for men with benign prostate disease and prostate cancer (PCa). Abbreviations: LUTS (Lower urinary tract symptoms), PSA (prostate-specific antigen), PSAD (Prostate-Specific Antigen Density), TRUS (Transrectal Ultrasound-guided biopsy), TPTP (Transperineal Template Prostate biopsy).
| Code | Age | Diagnosis | LUTS | PSA (ng/mL) | PSAD (ng/mL/cc) | TRUS Pathology | TPTP Pathology | Gleason Score | TNM Pathological Stage | D’Amico Classification |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LE097 | 75 | Benign | YES | 11 | 0.22 | N/A | - | N/A | - | |
| LE100 | 68 | Benign | YES | 0.25 | 0.01 | N/A | - | T2 | - | |
| LE103 | 65 | Benign | YES | 12 | 0.10 | N/A | - | Benign | - | |
| LE112 | 60 | Benign | NO | 5.7 | 0.14 | N/A | - | N/A | - | |
| LE312 | 67 | Benign | NO | 12 | 0.13 | N/A | - | N/A | - | |
| LE317 | 73 | Cancer | YES | 11 | 0.16 | N/A | 3 + 3 | 6 | T1c | Low |
| LE098 | 74 | Cancer | NO | 8.3 | 0.18 | 3 + 3 | 6 | Intermediate | ||
| LE101 | 51 | Cancer | YES | 4.2 | 0.16 | 3 + 4 | 7 | Benign | Intermediate | |
| LE111 | 83 | Cancer | YES | 11 | 0.11 | Flat | Intermediate | |||
| LE319 | 69 | Cancer | YES | 7.2 | 15.00 | N/A | 3 + 4 | 7 | T1c | Intermediate |
| LE320 | 71 | Cancer | NO | 7.5 | 0.18 | N/A | 3 + 4 | 7 | T1c | Intermediate |
| LE322 | 71 | Cancer | NO | 21 | 0.16 | N/A | 3 + 3 | 6 | T1c | Intermediate |
| LE102 | 74 | Cancer | YES | 75 | 2.72 | 4 + 5 | 9 | T3 | High | |
| LE104 | 78 | Cancer | YES | 82 | 2.68 | 5 + 5 | 10 | T4 | High | |
| LE105 | 80 | Cancer | YES | 40 | 1.90 | 5 + 4 | 9 | T3 | High | |
| LE109 | 65 | Cancer | YES | 31 | 1.53 | 4 + 5 | 9 | T2 | High | |
| LE113 | 79 | Cancer | NO | 29 | 1 | 4 + 5 | 9 | T2 | High | |
| LE309 | 56 | Cancer | YES | 10 | 0.19 | N/A | 4 + 3 | 7 | T2 | High |
| LE311 | 64 | Cancer | YES | 47 | 1.09 | 4 + 3 | Mets | 7 | Bone metastasis | High |
| LE313 | 76 | Cancer | YES | 66 | 0.05 | Neg | 4 + 5 | 9 | T1c | High |
| LE325 | 75 | Cancer | NO | 21 | 0.18 | N/A | 3 + 5 | 8 | T1c | High |
List of HLA-A*02:01 class-I and HLA-DRB1*01:01 class-II peptides derived from the hPAP42mer sequence.
| HHDII/DR1 Mice | Sequence | Haplotype | Length | SYFPEITHI Score | SYFPEITHI Score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Class I epitopes | SAMTNLAAL | HLA-A*02:01 | 9 mer | 24 | 30 |
| ILLWQPIPV | 9 mer | 24 | 24 | ||
| ALFPPEGVSI | HLA-A*02:01/A*03 | 10 mer | 27/25 | 27/25 | |
| Class II epitopes | LAALFPPEGVSIWNP | HLA-DRB1*01:01 | 15 mer | 25 | 25 |
| MSAMTNLAALFPPEG | 15 mer | 33 | 33 | ||
| PEGVSIWNPILLWQP | 15 mer | 25 | 25 | ||
| VSIWNPILLWQPIPV | 15 mer | 25 | 25 | ||
| DRTLMSAMTNLAALF | 15 mer | 22 | 30 |
List of murine monoclonal antibodies.
| Mouse Monoclonal Antibodies | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antibody | Fluorochrome | Volume μL/Test | Clone | Manufacturer |
| CD4 | Alexa Fluor™ 700 | 0.5 µL | GK1.5 | BioLegend, UK |
| CD8 | APC/Cy™7 | 2.5 µL | 53–6.7 | BioLegend, UK |
| CD3 | BV421 | 1 µL | 17A2 | BioLegend, UK |
| CD62L | FITC | 0.5 µL | MEL-14 | BioLegend, UK |
| CD44 | APC | 1.25 µL | IM7 | BioLegend, UK |
| GITR (CD357) | FITC | 2 µL | YGITR 765 | BioLegend, UK |
| OX-40 (CD134) | PE | 1.25 µL | OX-86 | BioLegend, UK |
| CTLA-4 (CD152) | PE/Dazzle™ 594 | 2.5 µL | UC10-4B9 | BioLegend, UK |
| LAG-3 (CD223) | PerCP-Cy™5.5 | 2.5 µL | C9B7W | BioLegend, UK |
| Tim-3 (CD366) | PE-Cy™7 | 2.5 µL | B8.2C12 | BioLegend, UK |
| PD-1 | APC | 2.5 µL | 29F.1A12 | BioLegend, UK |
| CD107a | FITC | 3 µL | 1D4B | BioLegend, UK |
| TNF-α | PE | 1.25 µL | MP6-XT22 | BioLegend, UK |
| Ki67 | PE-eFluor 610 | 0.3 µL | SolA15 | EBioscience Ltd., UK |
| IL-2 | PerCP-Cy™5.5 | 3 µL | JES6-5H4 | BioLegend, UK |
| IFNγ | PE-Cy™7 | 3 µL | XMG1.2 | BioLegend, UK |
| Granzyme B | APC | 2.5 µL | QA16A02 | BioLegend, UK |
Dextramers™ and human antibodies.
| Antibody | Fluorochrome | Volume μL/Test | Clone | Manufacture |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dextramer™ A*0201/Neg Control-PE | PE | 10 µL | WB266 | Immudex, Denmark |
| Dextramer™ A*0201/ILLWQPIPV-PE | PE | 10 µL | WB488 | Immudex, Denmark |
| CD8 | APC-Fire™ 750 | 2.5 µL | RPA-T8 | BioLegend, UK |
| CD3 | PE-Dazzle™ 594 | 2.5 µL | UCHT1 | BioLegend, UK |
| CD19 | BV421 | 2.5 µL | HIB19 | BioLegend, UK |
Figure 1Presence of ILL-specific CD8+ T cells in the blood of patients with PCa. Cryopreserved PBMCs from HLA-A2+ individuals were cultured for 12 days in the presence of IL-2, IL-15, and either the ILL9mer peptide or the hPAP42mer-mutated peptide. Three groups were compared: healthy individuals, individuals with benign disease, and patients with PCa. On day 12, PBMCs were blocked with a human FcR block and then incubated with surface mAbs and the relevant Dextramer™. (a) Proportion of CD8+ T cells within total T cells, (b) gating example of Dextramer™-positive CD8+ T cells and proportion of Dextramer™-positive CD8+ T cells following each stimulating condition. (c) Cytotoxicity of ILL-stimulated PBMCs against PKH26-labeled WT or PAPlow LNCaP cells was measured by flow cytometry. (d) Cytotoxicity against PKH26-labeled WT LNCaP cells was compared between each stimulating condition. No difference in the proportion of CD8+ T cells was observed between groups or stimulating conditions. ILL-specific CD8+ T cells were detected following ILL9mer peptide stimulation (benign:1/5, PCa: 6/16) and after hPAP42mer-mutated peptide stimulation (benign: 1/5, PCa: 4/16). Cytotoxicity against LNCaP cells was observed. Bars represent the mean percentage of positive cells and the errors bars represent the SD (n = 3 to 16 patients per group). Dots represent the mean percentage of cytotoxicity and the errors bars represent the SED (c). Differences in the proportion of positive cells between groups were determined using a two-way ANOVA comparison test.
Positive cells for Dextramer™ negative control and Dextramer™ ILL (red = patients exhibiting ILL-specific CTLs).
| ILL STIMULATION | PAP42MUT STIMULATION | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| INDIVIDUAL | % Dextramer™ Negative CTRL | % Dextramer ILL | % Dextramer™ Negative CTRL | % Dextramer™ ILL |
| HEALTHY 1 | 0.1 | 0.12 | 0.09 | 0.11 |
| HEALTHY 2 | 0.02 | 0.02 | 0.02 | 0.02 |
| HEALTHY 3 | 0.03 | 0.06 | 0.03 | 0.07 |
| LE097 | 0.18 | 0.1 | 0.16 | 0.2 |
| LE098 | 0.1 | 0.11 | 0.09 | 0.12 |
| LE100 | 0.14 | 0.14 | 0.09 | 0.15 |
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| 0.12 | 0.19 |
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| 0.12 | 0.17 |
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| 0.18 | 0.21 |
| LE112 | 0.11 | 0.26 | 0.11 | 0.13 |
| LE113 | 0.11 | 0.23 | 0.11 | 0.31 |
| LE309 | 0 | 0 | 0.01 | 0.01 |
| LE311 | 0 | 0.01 | 0 | 0.03 |
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| 0.03 | 0.01 |
| LE313 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| LE317 | 0.01 | 0.02 | 0 | 0.01 |
| LE319 | 0.06 | 0.04 | 0.03 | 0.09 |
| LE320 | 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.02 | 0.04 |
| LE322 | 0.05 | 0.04 | 0.03 | 0.03 |
| LE325 | 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.01 | 0.01 |
Figure 2The mutated hPAP42mer peptide increases the immunogenicity of the vaccine against several class-I and class-II PAP-derived epitopes and increases the functional avidity towards the ILL HLA-A*0201 epitope. HHDII/DR1 mice were immunized on days 1, 15, and 29 with either hPAP 42 mer WT or mutated peptide with CpG adjuvant. Seven days after the last immunization, splenocytes were isolated from spleens and an in vitro IFNγ ELISpot assay was performed. Splenocytes were stimulated with (A) hPAP-derived class I and class II peptides or (B) decreasing concentrations of ILL 9 mer peptide, for 48 h at 37 °C. Immunization with the mutated hPAP42mer peptide induced higher numbers of peptide-specific IFNγ-releasing T cells and induced T cells with a higher functional avidity for ILL 9 mer peptide than immunization with the WT hPAP42mer peptide. Bars represent the mean number of spots, and the error bars represent the SD. Sigmoidal curve representing the functional avidity of ILL 9 mer peptide (B, bottom). Two independent experiments performed (n = 6–7 mice per test group). A significant difference in the induction of peptide-specific IFNγ-releasing T cells between immunization groups was determined using a two-way ANOVA comparison test. The p-values were annotated as follows: * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001.
Figure 3CAF®09 adjuvant increases the immunogenicity of the vaccine against ILL 9 mer and VSIW 15 mer epitopes, but does not increase the functional avidity towards ILL 9 mer epitope. HHDII/DR1 mice were immunized on days 1, 15, and 29 with either the CpG or the CAF®09-based mutated hPAP 42 mer vaccine. Seven days after the last immunization, splenocytes were isolated from spleens and an in vitro IFNγ ELISpot assay was performed. Splenocytes were stimulated with (A) hPAP-derived class I and class II peptides or (B) decreasing concentrations of ILL 9 mer peptide, for 48 h at 37°C. Immunization with the CAF®09-based vaccine induced higher numbers of peptide-specific IFNγ-secreting T cells than immunization with other vaccines. Immunization with CpG adjuvant-induced T cells with a higher functional avidity for ILL 9 mer peptide than immunization with the CAF®09 adjuvant. Bars represent the mean number of spots and the error bars represent the SD. Sigmoidal curve representing the functional avidity of ILL 9 mer peptide (B, bottom). (A) Four to six independent experiments performed (n= 13 to 20 mice per test group) and (B) one to two independent experiments (n = 3 to 6 animals per test group). A significant difference in the induction of peptide-specific IFNγ-releasing T-cells between immunization groups was determined using a two-way ANOVA comparison test. The p-values were annotated as follows: * p < 0.05, **** p < 0.0001.
Figure 4The PAP42mer-mutated vaccine promotes the expansion of effector/memory CD8+ Tcells and induces ILL-specific CD8+ T cells with a secretory and degranulating phenotype. HHDII/DR1 mice were immunized on days 1, 15, and 29 with either the CpG or the CAF09®-based mutated hPAP 42 mer vaccine. Seven days after the last immunization, splenocytes were isolated from spleens and incubated with a murine FcR block and stained with surface Abs for flow cytometry analysis indicating (a) proportion of T cells, (b) proportion of effector memory T cells, and (c) expression of inhibitory receptors. Splenocytes were stimulated with either ILL 9 mer alone or with VSI 15 mer for 6 h at 37 °C, incubated with a murine FcR block, stained with surface mAbs, fixed, and permeabilized and stained with intracellular mAbs for flow cytometry analysis indicating (d) cytokine secretion, proliferation, and degranulation. The CAF09®-based vaccine increased the proportion of CD8+ T cells and of CD8+ memory T cells and induced the expression of PD-1. The vaccine also induced the proliferation, cytokine secretion, and degranulation of CD8+ T cells upon stimulation. Bars represent the mean percentage of positive cells and the error bars represent the SD. One to four independent experiments were performed (n = 3 to 12 animals per test group). A significant difference in the proportion of positive cells between immunization groups was determined using a two-way ANOVA comparison test. The p-values were annotated as follows: * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001, **** p < 0.0001.
Figure 5In vitro expanded ILL-specific CD8+ Tcells exhibit an exhausted phenotype while retaining highly secretory and cytotoxic function. HHDII/DR1 mice were immunized on days 1, 15, and 29 with either the CpG or the CAF09®-based mutated hPAP 42 mer vaccine. Seven days after the last immunization, splenocytes were isolated from spleens and incubated with ILL 9 mer peptide for 6 days, followed with 1 day of rest. Splenocytes were then incubated with a murine FcR block and stained with surface mAbs for flow cytometry analysis indicating (a) proportion of CD8+ T cells, (b) expression of inhibitory receptors, and (c) cytokine secretion and degranulation, following fixation, permeabilization, and staining with intracellular mAbs. For cytotoxicity experiments, splenocytes were co-incubated with 51Cr labeled peptide-pulsed target cells for 4 h and the radioactivity was measured to determine the percentage of cytotoxicity. (d) Percentage of cytotoxicity against ILL-pulsed or un-pulsed T2 cells and (e) correlation between the proportion of CD8+ T cells co-expressing PD-1, Tim-3, and LAG-3 receptors and the percentage of cytotoxicity against ILL pulsed T2 cells at 100:1 ratio. Alternatively, a flow cytometry-based cytotoxicity assay was performed by co-incubating for 3 h isolated CD8+ T cells as effector cells and PKH26-labeled LNCaP cells as target cells (f). Bars represent the mean percentage of positive cells and the error bars represent the SD (a–c). Dots represent the mean percentage of cytotoxicity and the errors bars represent the SED (d,f). Results are representative of two to three independent experiments (n = 6 to 9 animals per test group). The CAF09®-based vaccine increased the proportion of CD8+ T cells (a) and the expression of PD-1 (b) and induced ILL-specific CTLs with secretory and cytotoxic functions (c) capable of lysing ILL-presenting target cells (d). The co-expression of inhibitory receptors correlated with the capacity to lyse ILL-presenting target cells (e). CAF09®-based vaccine increased the cytotoxicity of CD8+ T cells against LNCaP cells (f). A significant difference in the proportion of positive cells between immunization groups was determined using a two-way ANOVA comparison test. The p-values were annotated as follows: **** p < 0.0001.
Figure 6Vaccine-induced ILL-specific CD8+ T cells, as detected using Dextramer™ staining, almost exclusively express PD-1. HHDII/DR1 mice were immunized on days 1, 15, and 29 with either the CpG or the CAF®09-based mutated hPAP 42 mer vaccine. Seven days after the final immunization, splenocytes were isolated from spleens. Splenocytes were then incubated with a murine FcR block, stained with surface mAbs for flow cytometry analysis indicating (A) proportion of CD8+ T cells and (B) expression of inhibitory receptors, on freshly isolated splenocytes, or incubated with ILL 9 mer peptide for 6 days and stained for flow cytometry analysis indicating (C) proportion of CD8+ T cells and (D) expression of inhibitory receptors. CAF®09-based vaccine induced ILL-specific CD8+ T cells (A) expressing PD-1 (B), which were expanded with in vitro peptide stimulation (C) and co-expressed PD-1, Tim-3, and LAG-3 (D). The p-values were annotated as follows: * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001.