Product Citations: 5

Targeted Delivery of Personalized Cancer Vaccines Based on Antibody-Antigen Complexes.

In Vaccines on 19 March 2025 by Zhang, Y., Yan, L., et al.

Personalized cancer vaccines based on tumor neoantigens show great potential in cancer immunotherapy due to their high safety and specificity. However, it is inherently difficult to realize the efficiently targeted delivery of personalized cancer vaccines to antigen-presenting cells (APCs).
This study aimed to address these challenges by developing and evaluating a personalized cancer vaccine based on antibody-antigen complexes, which was designed to enhance antitumor effects by increasing the utilization of tumor neoantigens by APCs. Mice were immunized with a carrier protein, keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH), to induce the production of antibodies against KLH. Subsequently, mice were immunized with KLH loaded with tumor neoantigens and the immunoadjuvant CpG ODN and underwent immunological analysis to evaluate the immune and antitumor effects.
The results showed that preimmunization with KLH could promote the uptake of the personalized KLH-based tumor vaccine, which was enhanced by dendritic cells (DCs) and macrophages (Mφs), by strengthening the T-cell immune responses to tumors.
Collectively, this work provides a new idea for the targeted delivery of personalized cancer vaccines.

  • Cancer Research
  • Immunology and Microbiology

Posttranslationally modified self-peptides promote hypertension in mouse models.

In The Journal of Clinical Investigation on 15 August 2024 by Bloodworth, N., Chen, W., et al.

Posttranslational modifications can enhance immunogenicity of self-proteins. In several conditions, including hypertension, systemic lupus erythematosus, and heart failure, isolevuglandins (IsoLGs) are formed by lipid peroxidation and covalently bond with protein lysine residues. Here, we show that the murine class I major histocompatibility complex (MHC-I) variant H-2Db uniquely presents isoLG-modified peptides and developed a computational pipeline that identifies structural features for MHC-I accommodation of such peptides. We identified isoLG-adducted peptides from renal proteins, including sodium glucose transporter 2, cadherin 16, Kelch domain-containing protein 7A, and solute carrier family 23, that are recognized by CD8+ T cells in tissues of hypertensive mice, induce T cell proliferation in vitro, and prime hypertension after adoptive transfer. Finally, we find patterns of isoLG-adducted antigen restriction in class I human leukocyte antigens that are similar to those in murine analogs. Thus, we have used a combined computational and experimental approach to define likely antigenic peptides in hypertension.

  • Cardiovascular biology

Synergistic Combination of Oncolytic Virotherapy and Immunotherapy for Glioma.

In Clinical Cancer Research on 1 May 2020 by Tang, B., Guo, Z. S., et al.

We hypothesized that the combination of a local stimulus for activating tumor-specific T cells and an anti-immunosuppressant would improve treatment of gliomas. Virally encoded IL15Rα-IL15 as the T-cell activating stimulus and a prostaglandin synthesis inhibitor as the anti-immunosuppressant were combined with adoptive transfer of tumor-specific T cells.
Two oncolytic poxviruses, vvDD vaccinia virus and myxoma virus, were each engineered to express the fusion protein IL15Rα-IL15 and a fluorescent protein. Viral gene expression (YFP or tdTomato Red) was confirmed in the murine glioma GL261 in vitro and in vivo. GL261 tumors in immunocompetent C57BL/6J mice were treated with vvDD-IL15Rα-YFP vaccinia virus or vMyx-IL15Rα-tdTr combined with other treatments, including vaccination with GARC-1 peptide (a neoantigen for GL261), rapamycin, celecoxib, and adoptive T-cell therapy.
vvDD-IL15Rα-YFP and vMyx-IL15Rα-tdTr each infected and killed GL261 cells in vitro. In vivo, NK cells and CD8+ T cells were increased in the tumor due to the expression of IL15Rα-IL15. Each component of a combination treatment contributed to prolonging survival: an oncolytic virus, the IL15Rα-IL15 expressed by the virus, a source of T cells (whether by prevaccination or adoptive transfer), and prostaglandin inhibition all synergized to produce elimination of gliomas in a majority of mice. vvDD-IL15Rα-YFP occasionally caused ventriculitis-meningitis, but vMyx-IL15Rα-tdTr was safe and effective, causing a strong infiltration of tumor-specific T cells and eliminating gliomas in 83% of treated mice.
IL15Rα-IL15-armed oncolytic poxviruses provide potent antitumor effects against brain tumors when combined with adoptive T-cell therapy, rapamycin, and celecoxib.
©2020 American Association for Cancer Research.

  • FC/FACS
  • Mus musculus (House mouse)
  • Cancer Research
  • Immunology and Microbiology

CD8 T cell control of HSV reactivation from latency is abrogated by viral inhibition of MHC class I.

In Cell Host & Microbe on 13 September 2007 by Orr, M. T., Mathis, M. A., et al.

In humans, herpes simplex virus (HSV) establishes latency in sensory nerve ganglia from where it periodically reactivates, whereas in murine models, the virus efficiently establishes latency but rarely reactivates. HSV inhibits MHC class I antigen presentation to CD8 T cells efficiently in humans but poorly in mice, and whether this is a crucial determinant of HSV's ability to reactivate in humans remains uncertain. To test this, we generated a panel of recombinant HSVs that inhibit presentation by murine MHC class I mimicking the effect in humans. Antigen-specific CD8 T cells prevent the in vivo reactivation of wild-type HSV. Despite their presence in the ganglia of latently infected mice, CD8 T cells do not prevent the reactivation of recombinant HSVs that inhibit murine MHC class I in mice. These findings suggest that efficient inhibition of MHC class I by HSV is a key factor in its ability to reactivate in humans.

  • Immunology and Microbiology

Cytomegalovirus misleads its host by priming of CD8 T cells specific for an epitope not presented in infected tissues.

In The Journal of Experimental Medicine on 5 January 2004 by Holtappels, R., Podlech, J., et al.

Cytomegaloviruses (CMVs) code for several proteins that inhibit the presentation of antigenic peptides to CD8 T cells. Although the molecular mechanisms of CMV interference with the major histocompatibility complex class I pathway are long understood, surprisingly little evidence exists to support a role in vivo. Here we document the first example of the presentation of an antigenic peptide being blocked by a CMV immune evasion protein in organs relevant to CMV disease. Although this Db-restricted peptide, which is derived from the antiapoptotic protein M45 of murine CMV (mCMV), is classified as an immunodominant peptide based on response magnitude and long-term memory, adoptive transfer of M45 epitope-specific CD8 T cells did not protect against infection with wild-type mCMV. Notably, the same cells protected C57BL/6 mice infected with an mCMV mutant in which immune evasion protein m152/gp40 is deleted. These data indicate that direct presentation or cross-presentation of an antigenic peptide by professional antigen-presenting cells can efficiently prime CD8 T cells that fail in protection against CMV organ disease because m152/gp40 prevents presentation of this peptide in pathogenetically relevant tissue cells.

  • Immunology and Microbiology
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