Previous Article |
Table of Contents
| Next Article
Medical Sciences
An adenoviral vector cancer vaccine that delivers a tumor-associated antigen/CD40-ligand fusion protein to dendritic cells



Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center, San Diego, CA 92121
Communicated by Alan Garen, Yale University, New Haven, CT, August 21, 2003 (received for review February 8, 2003)
| Abstract |
|---|
|
|
|---|
E7 viral antigen | MUC-1 antigen | T cells | memory cells | immunotherapy
To administer the tumor-associated antigen (TAA)/CD40L vaccine in a way that could affect T cells in secondary lymphoid tissue in areas of the body other than the gastrointestinal tract, and to create a therapy that does not require the antibody-targeted IL-2, we constructed replication-incompetent adenoviral vectors encoding chimeric TAA/ecdCD40L transcription units. These transcription units encode either the human papillomavirus (HPV) E7 foreign tumor antigen or the human MUC-1 (hMUC-1) self-antigen fused to the 209-aa ecd of the CD40L. This region of CD40L contains all the sequences necessary for the formation of the CD40L trimer (2). These transcription units resembled the vaccine of Xiang in that they contained a leader sequence for secretion linked to the fusion protein composed of a TAA and the CD40L.
Our vaccine differed from that of Xiang in that it used an adenoviral vector rather than a plasmid in a Salmonella bacterial host strain for the delivery of the TAA/ecdCD40L transcription unit. Xiang used a leucine zipper domain in the region between the hCEA antigen and the full-length CD40L, whereas we used an 8-aa linker (NDAQAPKS) between the TAA (E7 or hMUC-1) gene and the ecdCD40L gene. The Xiang construct positions the hCEA antigen at the carboxyl terminus of the full-length CD40L, whereas our vector transcription unit attached the TAA to the amino-terminal end of the ecd of the CD40L. Our arrangement should provide better binding of the CD40L to the CD40 receptor on DCs and better secretion from the cells to the extracellular space. Xiang's method required the administration of a fusion molecule composed of IL-2 linked to a T cell-targeted antibody after the hCEA/CD40L DNA vaccine, whereas our TAA/ecdCD40L adenoviral vaccine was administered without an IL-2 boost. Xiang administered his plasmid DNA vaccine orally, whereas we administered our vector vaccine s.c.
The adenoviral system used in our work has several theoretical advantages over the Salmonella delivery system. The expression of the TAA/CD40L gene may be at higher levels and for longer periods of time with the adenoviral delivery than with the DNA vaccine. This adenoviral TAA/ecdCD40L vector injection may thereby induce a more vigorous immune response. Although immune-specific T cells that are elicited after immunization are thought to traffic throughout the body, a propensity still exists for tissue-specific homing by memory T cells to the lymphoid sites draining the natural area of infection (3). Thus, s.c. injection of the adenoviral vector carrying the highly immunogenic TAA/ecdCD40L in the region of the tumor cells may foster the optimal trafficking of sensitized cytotoxic T cells and the generation of memory cells.
For our experiments, we chose two TAAs. The first is the E7 protein of the most commonly encountered pathogenic (cancer-causing) genotype of the HPV. We selected this antigen because it is expressed in HPV-associated intraepithelial cervical dysplasia and in the primary cells of HPV-associated cervical cancer (4). In addition, several laboratories (5, 6), including the DiMaio laboratory (7) and our own laboratory (8), have shown that the E7 protein is required for the maintenance of the malignant phenotype of cervical cancer cells.
The second TAA is the hMUC-1 epithelial antigen. This "self-antigen" is focally expressed from birth in normal epithelial cells, but is diffusely up-regulated on epithelial surfaces in 90% of cancers of the breast, ovary, colon, and lung (9). The overexpression of hMUC-1 has been shown to promote anchorage-independent growth of tumor cells (10). Mice that have been made transgenic for hMUC-1 have been shown to develop tolerance for hMUC-1 antigen-bearing syngeneic mouse cancer cells (11).
The experimental results described in this report show that the s.c. injection of the adenoviral vector carrying the E7/ecdCD40L fusion gene generates immunological resistance to E7-positive cancer cells for at least 1 year. In addition, the s.c. injection of the adenoviral vector carrying the hMUC-1/ecdCD40L fusion gene suppresses the growth of hMUC-1-positive mouse cancer cells in hMUC-1.Tg mice that are transgenic for the hMUC-1 gene. The induction of in vivo resistance to the growth of the hMUC-1-positive syngeneic mouse cancer cells was shown to involve a CD8+ T cell immune response against the hMUC-1 self-antigen in hMUC1.Tg transgenic mice. These mice are initially immunologically unresponsive to the hMUC-1-positive mouse cancer cells. Thus, the hMUC-1/CD40L vector injections appeared to overcome anergy. This vaccine may be of use in preventing the recurrence of epithelial malignancies after surgery and for the immunotherapy of advanced epithelial cancers that recur after surgery.
| Materials and Methods |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Construction of the Adenoviral Vectors. The plasmid pDC406-mCD40L was purchased from ATCC. PCR was used to produce the carboxyl-terminal 209 aa of the ecd of the mouse CD40L (ecdCD40L), which contained neither the transmembrane domain nor the cytoplasmic domain. A spacer (NDAQAPKS) was placed at the 5' (amino-terminal) end of the transcription unit for the ecdCD40L. This fragment was inserted into the plasmid pShuttle-CMV (ref. 12; CMV, cytomegalovirus) after restriction endonuclease digestion with HindIII and XhoI. This vector is designated pSCMVecdCD40L.
The E7 or ecdhMUC-1 TAA fragments were inserted into the pShuttle between the CMV promoter and the linker at the amino-terminal end of the ecdCD40L transcription unit after digestion of the pSCMVecdCD40L plasmid shuttle vector with NotI and XhoI. These plasmids were designated pSCMVE7/ecdCD40L and pSCMVecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L. In a similar fashion, we fused the GFP gene with the ecdCD40L gene and inserted it downstream of the CMV promoter in the pShuttle-CMV vector (12). This plasmid was designated pSCMVGFP/ecdCD40L. We also constructed another set of pShuttle plasmids by inserting the human growth hormone signal sequence (sig) immediately downstream of the CMV promoter in the pSCMVE7/ecdCD40L, pSCMVecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L, and pSCMVGFP/ecdCD40L plasmids to create the pSCMVsigE7/ecdCD40L, pSCMsigecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L, and pSCMVsigGFP/ecdCD40L shuttle plasmids. The signal sequence was placed at the amino-terminal limit of the TAA/ecdCD40L protein to promote the release of the TAA/ecdCD40L protein from the vector-infected cells. The secretion is designed to amplify the effect of the vector beyond the infected cells. In addition, for the TAA/ecdCD40L protein to activate DCs and to be taken up by the DCs, the protein must be released from the vector-infected cells.
Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L, Ad-sig-ecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L, and Ad-sig-GFP/ecdCD40L are replication-incompetent adenoviral vectors that are structurally similar, except for the TAA transcription unit between the sig, which is 3' of the CMV promoter, and at the amino-terminal end of the secretable CD40L transcription unit. All these vectors lack the E1 and E3 adenoviral genes and were assembled by homologous recombination in bacterial host strains by using the AdEasy system (12) with the pSCMVsigE7/ecdCD40L, pSCMVsigecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L, and pSCMVsigGFP/ecdCD40L shuttle plasmids.
Tumor Model for Ad-sig-TAAecdCD40L Injections. We first conducted studies to evaluate the response of tumors to the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector injections in C57BL/6 mice. All mice were treated by using the following protocol unless otherwise described. The Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L adenoviral vector [1 x 108 plaque-forming units (pfu)] or control adenoviral vectors (1 x 108 pfu), as shown in Fig. 1, were injected s.c. on days 0 and 7. One week after the last s.c. vector injection, 5 x 105 TC-1 tumor cells (13) were injected s.c. at a different site. For all injections, the vector or the cells were suspended in 100 µl of PBS. Tumor growth was monitored three times each week at the injection site of the tumor cells by caliper measurement and inspection. The mice were killed when their tumors became ulcerated or reached 1.5 cm in diameter. Tumor volumes are calculated by the product of length x width2/2. Similar experiments were carried out with the Ad-sig-ecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L vector, the LL1/LL2hMUC-1 cell line, and the hMUC-1.Tg transgenic mouse strain.
|
Adoptive Transfer of Lymphocytes from Tumor-Free Mice after Injection with TC-1 Cells, and s.c. Injection of the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L Vector. Preparation of the C57BL/6 donor mice. C57BL/6 mice were injected s.c. with 5 x 105 TC-1 cells. When a small tumor nodule appeared at the injection site, measurements were conducted with calipers three times a week. Five days after the injection of TC-1 cells, 1 x 108 pfu of the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector that expressed the secretable form of the E7/ecdCD40L fusion protein were injected s.c. at a site separate from the tumor nodule in the C57BL/6 mice. This vector injection was repeated in 7 days. Several weeks later, 1 x 107 TC-1 cells were then injected s.c. in the mice that were tumor-free. Of the 10 tumor-free mice that were injected with the vector and the second dose of tumor cells, 8 mice remained tumor-free. Four of the 8 mice that remained free of tumor for 1 year were killed. The splenic T cells were isolated by negative selection by using magnetic bead separation according to StemCell Technologies (Vancouver). The purified T cells were injected i.p. into C57BL/6 nu/nu athymic mice that carried s.c. nodules of TC-1 tumor cells (see Fig. 4A).
|
|
In Vivo Depletion of CD4+ or CD8+ T Lymphocytes. In a separate experiment, in vivo mAb ablation of CD8 (clone 2.43; ATCC TIB 210) or CD4 (clone GK1.5; ATCC TIB 207) T cell subsets was performed by i.p. injection of 0.5 mg of antibody. This antibody was purified from the culture supernatants of hybridomas. The CD8- or CD4-depleting antibodies were injected i.p. into the immunocompetent C57BL/6 donor mice on days -5, -3, and -1 before the first vector vaccination, and every 6 days thereafter (500 µg of purified antibody per mouse per injection) during vaccination, and also on days 6, 7, 8, 10, 12, and 14 after tumor challenge (14). On day 0 and day 7, 1 x 108 pfu of the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector were injected s.c. Seven days later, 5 x 105 E7-positive TC-1 cells were injected s.c. into each mouse. Then, the mice were observed for 3 months.
Antibody suspensions were purified from hybridoma supernatants by passage through protein G columns according to the manufacturer's instructions (Pierce). CD4+ and CD8+ T cell depletion was monitored by flow cytometric analysis of splenocytes isolated from test animals. On the day of tumor challenge, CD4+ and CD8+ cell populations were reduced by 95% and 99%, respectively.
Mice were monitored for 3 months after tumor challenge and, at that time, the tumor-free mice were killed. The spleen T cells were then isolated as described above. Five million of the CD4+ T cells from the CD8-depleted, sensitized animals were mixed with five million CD8+ T cells from unsensitized animals. Similarly, five million of the CD8+ T cells from the CD4-depleted, sensitized animals were mixed with five million CD4+ T cells from the unsensitized mice. Ten million of these mixtures of sensitized CD8+ T cells and unsensitized CD4+ T cells, or sensitized CD4+ T cells and unsensitized CD8+ T cells, were injected into C57BL/6 nu/nu mice in which one million TC-1 cells had already been injected 5 days before. The animals were then monitored for survival.
| Results |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Activation of DCs by the E7/ecdCD40L Fusion Protein. To test whether the E7/ecdCD40L fusion protein could bind to the CD40 receptor and activate cytokine release from DCs, we exposed bone marrow-derived DCs (15) to the following adenoviral vectors at a multiplicity of infection of 100: Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L, Ad-sig-GFP/ecdCD40L, and Ad-E7. The infected DCs were then inoculated in 24-well plates at 2 x 105 cells per ml. ELISA analyses confirmed that infection of DCs by the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector stimulated the DCs to produce 18 pg of IL-12 per 2 x 105 cells per ml in 24 h, and 88 pg of IL-12 per 2 x 105 cells per ml in 48 h. This finding was statistically significantly higher than the level of IL-12 released after exposure of the DCs to the Ad-sig-GFP/ecdCD40L vector, the Ad-E7 vectors, or the PBS control (P < 0.0001 as shown in Fig. 2A). It is possible that the level of cytokine release in cells exposed to the Ad-sig-GFP/ecdCD40L vector is lower than that seen with the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector because of a lower level of expression of the GFP/ecdCD40L, or because of the toxicity of the GFP to cells in which it is expressed at high levels.
|
Similarly, as shown in Fig. 2B, exposure of the DCs to the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector also induced secretion of 335 pg of IFN-
per 2 x 105 cells per ml in 24 h and 769 pg of IFN-
per 2 x 105 cells per ml in 48 h. This level was statistically significantly higher than the levels induced by the PBS control or the Ad-E7 or Ad-sig-GFP/ecdCD40L vectors (P < 0.0001). We also exposed bone marrow-derived DCs to the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector and showed that no IL-2 was secreted by the vector-exposed DCs (sensitivity of the assay was 0.3 pg/ml). These data suggest that the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector can induce cytokine release from the DCs without the involvement of IL-2.
To test whether the induction of IL-12 and IFN-
release was caused by the binding of the E7/ecdCD40L protein to the CD40 receptor on the DCs, we added 10 µg of either nonimmune IgG or 10 µg of anti-CD40L antibody to DCs that had been exposed to the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector. Addition of this antibody reduced the IL-12 released after exposure to the vector from 27 pg per 200,000 DCs in 24 h to 0 pg per 200,000 DCs in 24 h. The IFN-
released in the presence of the nonimmune IgG was 366 pg per 200,000 DCs in 24 h, whereas, with the addition of anti-CD40L antibody, the level released was reduced to 71 pg per 200,000 DCs in 24 h. These experiments were carried out in triplicate. These results suggest that the TAA/ecdCD40L fusion protein that is released from Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L-exposed DCs can assemble itself into a functional trimer that binds to the CD40 receptor on the DCs, thereby activating the DCs to release IL-12 and IFN-
.
We were also able to show that the exposure of bone marrow-derived DCs to the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector induces an increase in the percentage of DCs that were positive for CD80 and CD86 from 8.4% to 27.7% (for CD80) and from 3.3% to 27.4% (for CD86). Thus, the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector induced activation of the DCs.
Subcutaneous Injection of the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L Vector Confers Protection Against Engraftment and Growth of the E7-Positive TC-1 Cancer Cell Line. Female C57BL/6 mice were injected s.c. with 1 x 108 pfu of the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L or Ad-sig-GFP/ecdCD40L vectors once on each of 2 days, 7 days apart. The vector-treated mice were then injected s.c. with 5 x 105 cells from the E7-positive TC-1 cancer cell line (13) 10 days after the last vector injection. As shown in Fig. 3, 0% (0 of 5) of mice injected with the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector formed palpable tumors during 2 months of observation after a single injection of TC-1 cells, whereas 100% (5 of 5) of the mice injected with the Ad-sig-GFP/ecdCD40L vector before the injection of the TC-1 cells formed s.c. tumors, which were >500 mm3 by 15 days after TC-1 tumor-cell injection.
|
The differences between the sizes of the tumors in mice injected with the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector and the Ad-sig-GFP/ ecdCD40L vector are statistically significantly different at the P < 0.001 level. The fact that the Ad-GFP/ecdCD40L vector injection does not protect the mice shows that the protective effect of the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector, which prevents the growth of the TC-1 cell line, is not due to the adenoviral infection/transfection process.
When the tumor-free animals from the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L-treated group were rechallenged with a larger dose of TC-1 cells (1 x 107 cells), a period of transient tumor growth was initially seen, which was followed by a decline in the size of the tumor nodule, ultimately leading to complete tumor regression in 100% of the five animals rechallenged with the higher dose of TC-1 cells.
Injection of the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L Vector Induces Tumor Regression of Established TC-1 Tumors. Mice were first injected s.c. with 5 x 105 TC-1 cells on the hind flank. Five days later, the mice were injected s.c. at a different site with the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector. This vector injection was repeated 7 days later. Control mice were injected s.c. with PBS 5 days after the injection of TC-1 cells (see Fig. 4A for time course of the experiment). As shown in Fig. 4B,two s.c. injections of the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector resulted in transient growth followed by regression that was complete in 100% of the mice by 25 days after the second Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector injection. The second challenge of the immunized animals with a 20-fold increase in the number of the TC-1 tumor cells (see Fig. 4A) produced a brief transient growth and then complete regression of the tumor nodule in 100% of the mice injected with the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector after the injection (data not shown). Although all the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector-injected mice showed complete regression of tumors (see Fig. 4B), 100% of the animals injected with PBS developed progressive tumor growth at the TC-1 injection site within 14 days.
Splenic T Cells from Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L Vector-Injected C57BL/6 Mice Can Passively Transfer T Cell-Mediated Tumor Immunity to TC-1 Cells for up to 1 Year After Vector Injection. We monitored the mice from the experiment shown in Fig. 4A (time course of the experiment) for up to 1 year after TC-1 tumor injection, Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector injection (two injections separated by 7 days), and rechallenge with 1 x 107 TC-1 cells. Four of the eight animals that remained tumor-free for >1 year were killed and the T cells were isolated from the spleen by negative selection by using antibody and magnetic bead technology. Ten million of these splenic T cells were injected i.p. into C57BL/6 athymic nu/nu mice (n = 7), which had been injected s.c. 5 days previously with 5 x 105 TC-1 cells. As shown in Fig. 5A, the tumors in the nude mice given i.p. injections of the T cells from the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L-sensitized donor mice grew into palpable s.c. nodules for 6 days and then regressed in all animals to very small tumors. The sizes of the s.c. tumor nodules were an average of 114 mm3 on day 4, 234 mm3 on day 6, 151 mm3 on day 8, and 140 mm3 on day 10 after the i.p. injection of the T cells from the sensitized immunocompetent animals shown in Fig. 4B. In three of the seven treated mice, the tumors regressed completely. In contrast, none of the s.c. tumors in the nude mice injected i.p. with T cells from unsensitized donor mice regressed. All the mice in the latter group died with progressive tumor growth within 3 weeks after TC-1 tumor cell injection. The mice treated with the i.p. injection of the splenic T cells from the sensitized donors were monitored for 3 months after the TC-1 challenge and remained tumor-free during that time.
A separate experiment was performed to determine the relative contribution of the CD8+ vs. the CD4+ T cells to the induction of immunoresistance to the TC-1 cells. The C57BL/6 mice were injected with the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector twice, with each injection 7 days apart. Seven days after the last injection, 5 x 105 of the TC-1 cells were injected into a separate s.c. site. To deplete CD4 or CD8 T cells, the C57BL/6 donor mice were injected with antibodies against either CD4+ T cells or CD8+ T cells before and during the injection of the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector (see Materials and Methods for the exact schedule of injections).
The efficiency of such antibody treatment for either the CD4 or CD8 depletion was determined to be 95% and 99%, respectively. Seven days after the last vector injection, the mice were injected with 5 x 105 TC-1 cells. Splenic CD8+ or CD4+ T cells were collected from the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector-treated, CD4+- or CD8+-depleted donor mice, which had remained tumor-free for 3 months.
Five million of the CD8+ T cells from CD4-depleted sensitized donors were mixed with 5 million of the splenic CD4+ T cells from unsensitized donors. These cells are referred to as CD8+ T cells from sensitized donors. Similarly, 5 million of the splenic CD4+ T cells from CD8-depleted sensitized donors were mixed with 5 million of the splenic CD8+ T cells from unsensitized donors. These cells are referred to as CD4+ T cells from sensitized donors. Five million of each of these populations of cells were injected i.p. into C57BL/6 athymic nude mouse recipients in which TC-1 nodules had already been established.
As shown in Fig. 5B, the CD4+ T cells (thin unbroken line) from the sensitized C57BL/6 mice did not protect the C57BL/6 nu/nu mice, whereas the CD8+ cells from the sensitized C57BL/6 mice (thick unbroken line) prolonged the survival of the nude mice after injection of the TC-1 cells. Lymphocytes from unsensitized donor mice (broken thick line) did not protect the mice from TC-1 tumor growth. No statistically significant difference exists between the control- and CD8-depleted groups in Fig. 5 (P = 0.21).
Subcutaneous Injection of the Ad-sig-ecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L Vector Overcomes Anergy for hMUC-1-Positive Cells in Mice That Are Transgenic for hMUC-1. The MUC-1 antigen is overexpressed in carcinomas of the breast, ovary, and pancreas and in other carcinomas (9). MUC-1 is also a self-antigen that is focally expressed on normal secretory epithelial cell apical surfaces. The overexpression of hMUC-1 in epithelial cancers is thought to disrupt E-cadherin function, leading to anchorage-independent growth and metastases (10). hMUC-1.Tg mice, which are transgenic for the hMUC-1 antigen, have been reported to be unresponsive immunologically to the hMUC-1 antigen (11).
We therefore s.c. injected the Ad-sig-ecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L vector into hMUC-1.Tg mice. The hMUC-1.Tg mice had expressed the hMUC-1 antigen since birth (11). This experiment would therefore test whether the Ad-sig-ecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L vector injection could produce resistance in anergic mice to the growth of syngeneic mouse cancer cells that were positive for the hMUC-1 antigen. As shown in Fig. 6, injection of the hMUC-1 mouse syngeneic tumor cell line, LL1/LL2hMUC-1, into the hMUC-1.Tg mice, which had not been injected with vector (
), produced progressive growth of the LL1/LL2hMUC-1 s.c. tumor. These control animals had to be killed by 25 days after the s.c. injection of the tumor cells.
|
In contrast, in the hMUC-1.Tg transgenic mice that received s.c. injections of the Ad-sig-ecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L vector, the growth of the LL1/LL2hMUC-1 cell line was completely suppressed in all the animals tested (see
, Fig. 6). Thus, the Ad-sig-ecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L vector strategy can overcome anergy in 100% of the test mice without the need for additional cytokine booster treatments.
| Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The study of the effect of s.c. injection of the Ad-sig-ecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L vector into hMUC-1.Tg mice (11) allowed us to test whether the Ad-sig-ecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L vector injection by itself could activate a CD8+ T cell immune response against the hMUC-1-positive mouse cells in 100% of the animals otherwise anergic to the hMUC-1 antigen. This proved to be the case.
The Ad-sig-TAA/ecdCD40L vector strategy described in this article is unique in several ways. It has been shown to overcome anergy in a transgenic mouse model in 100% of the test mice without the use of cytokine boosting. In addition, it can generate cellular immunity for up to a year, which indicates that the vector strategy outlined in this article induces memory cells.
The Garen laboratory (16) has recently reported that the s.c. injection of 293 cells infected with an adenoviral vector carrying an E7/IgGFc transcription unit can suppress the growth of the TC-1 cell line in a syngeneic mouse model. An interesting parallel exists between the Ad-sig-E7/IgGFc vector of Garen and the Ad-sig-TAA/ecdCD40L vector described in this article: an in vivo continuous release strategy is used in both sets of experiments to generate an immune response against a foreign antigen.
The finding about the Ad-TAA/ecdCD40L vector that is different from the findings reported by Garen and his colleagues is the successful activation of an immune response against self-antigens without the need for cytokine booster treatments. The successful induction of T cell-mediated tumor immunity in 100% of the test anergic animals with the Ad-sig-ecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L vector shows that the adenoviral vector delivery vehicle is superior to the oral DNA vaccine of Xiang (1) that was delivered in Salmonella.No need exists to use additional IL-2 treatments after the TAA-ecdCD40L vaccination in the case of the Ad-sig-ecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L vector, whereas the IL-2 treatments are required to induce an antitumor immune response in 100% of the anergic animals with the Salmonella DNA vaccine approach. This experimental result confirms the superiority of the adenoviral vector approach.
The introduction of the secretory sequence at the amino-terminal end of the TAA/ecdCD40L transcription unit and the deletion of the transmembrane domain of the CD40L ensure that this protein will be secreted from the infected cells. Previous reports of the use (17) of Ad-CD40L vectors did not use a secretable CD40L transcription unit because the goal was to display the CD40L on the plasma membrane of the DCs. In this work (17), the effect of the vector was limited to the vector-infected cells and the cells that they directly stimulate. The use of the secretable vector in our work produces an amplification effect beyond the vector infected cells to uninfected DCs.
The statistically significant increase in secretion of IL-12 and IFN-
at 48 h after exposure of the DCs to the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector, as compared with the PBS control (see Fig. 2), shows that the E7/ecdCD40L fusion protein can bind to the CD40 receptor on DCs and stimulate the CD40 receptor sufficiently well to activate the DCs. The fact that the IL-12 and IFN-
secretion after exposure to the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector is statistically significantly greater than the secretion after exposure of the DCs to the Ad-E7 or Ad-sig-GFP/ecdCD40L vectors (see Fig. 2) shows that the increased secretion is not due to the effect of the adenoviral infection/transfection process on the DCs.
One possible complication of inducing an immune response against a self-antigen associated with cancer is that this could generate an autoimmune disease against the normal tissues that normally express that antigen. Several considerations suggest that this will not be a problem with the MUC-1 antigen. First, although the MUC-1 antigen is overexpressed diffusely at very high levels throughout neoplastic epithelial cells, MUC-1 is expressed only very focally and at very low levels in normal epithelial apical structures. Although experiments using a tandem-repeat protein of the MUC-1 antigen with a Leishmania-derived protein as adjuvant generated in chimpanzees CD4+ helper and CD8+ cytotoxic responses, no signs of autoimmune disease were detected for up to 1 year after the administration of the vaccine (18). Passive transfer of anti-MUC-12 antibodies does not cause autoimmune disease (19).
The results obtained with the Ad-sig-E7/ecdCD40L vector injections suggest that these vectors may be useful in the prevention of HPV-associated cervical cancer and for the treatment of metastatic cervical cancer. In addition, because hMUC-1 is a self-antigen that is overexpressed in 90% of carcinomas of the breast, ovary, colon, and lung, it is possible that the Ad-sig-ecdhMUC-1/ecdCD40L vector vaccine strategy described in this report could be of use in activating an immune response against a wide range of epithelial neoplasms in human patients.
| Acknowledgements |
|---|
| Footnotes |
|---|
* L.Z. and Y.T. contributed equally to this work. ![]()
Present address: Department of Surgery, Yale University School of Medicine, 333 Cedar Street, New Haven, CT 06520. ![]()
Present address: Ankara University School of Medicine, Ankara 06100, Turkey. ![]()
Present address: Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT 06520. ![]()
¶ To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: adeisseroth{at}skcc.org.
| References |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles in HighWire Press-hosted journals:
![]() |
H. Akbulut, Y. Tang, K. G. Akbulut, J. Maynard, L. Zhang, and A. Deisseroth Antitumor immune response induced by i.t. injection of vector-activated dendritic cells and chemotherapy suppresses metastatic breast cancer. Mol. Cancer Ther., August 1, 2006; 5(8): 1975 - 1985. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
H. K. Lyerly Your Ad here: optimizing adenoviral vector-based vaccines Blood, November 1, 2004; 104(9): 2612 - 2613. [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
![]() |
Y. Tang, L. Zhang, J. Yuan, H. Akbulut, J. Maynard, P.-J. Linton, and A. Deisseroth Multistep process through which adenoviral vector vaccine overcomes anergy to tumor-associated antigens Blood, November 1, 2004; 104(9): 2704 - 2713. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||