Publication

Rapid induction of specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes against melanoma-associated antigens by a recombinant vaccinia virus vector expressing multiple immunodominant epitopes and costimulatory molecules in vivo

Journal Paper/Review - Mar 1, 2002

Units
PubMed
Doi

Citation
Oertli D, Heberer M, Harder F, Schumacher R, Adamina M, Padovan E, Kocher T, Noppen C, Zajac P, Marti W, Spagnoli G. Rapid induction of specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes against melanoma-associated antigens by a recombinant vaccinia virus vector expressing multiple immunodominant epitopes and costimulatory molecules in vivo. Hum Gene Ther 2002; 13:569-75.
Type
Journal Paper/Review (English)
Journal
Hum Gene Ther 2002; 13
Publication Date
Mar 1, 2002
Issn Print
1043-0342
Pages
569-75
Brief description/objective

A specific cellular immune response directed against a panel of three defined tumor-associated antigen (TAA) epitopes was induced in metastatic melanoma patients by a prime-boost strategy taking advantage of an innovative recombinant vaccinia virus as evaluated by quantitative assessment of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) with corresponding specificity. The immunization protocol consisted of the administration of psoralen-UV-treated and replication-incompetent recombinant vaccinia virus encoding the three immunodominant HLA-A*0201-restricted epitopes Melan-A(27-35), gp100(280-288), and tyrosinase(1-9) together with two costimulatory molecules, B7.1 and B7.2, in the context of systemic granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) treatment. Boosts were subsequently applied with corresponding synthetic nonapeptides and GM-CSF. Specific CTL induction was assessed by tetramer staining and CTL precursor (CTLp) frequency evaluation. Within 12 days of injection of the recombinant vector, cytotoxic T cell responses specific for engineered epitopes were detectable in three of three patients. During the vaccination treatment, antigen-specific CTLp frequencies exceeding 1:10,000 peripheral CD8(+) T cells could be observed. Tetramer staining also revealed significant increases in specific CD8(+) T cell numbers. We conclude that active specific antitumor vaccination can raise a concurrent and specific cellular immune response against a panel of molecularly defined antigens, thereby increasing the chance of an immune hit against neoplastic cells with heterogeneous antigen expression. Data from this study emphasize the potency of a recombinant vaccinia virus vector encoding multiple minigenes and costimulatory molecules in the context of exogenously administered GM-CSF. Clinical effectiveness of this immunologically active protocol should therefore be explored in appropriately selected groups of patients.