Critical components of a DNA fusion vaccine able to induce protective cytotoxic T cells against a single epitope of a tumor antigen

J Rice, S Buchan, FK Stevenson - The Journal of Immunology, 2002 - journals.aai.org
J Rice, S Buchan, FK Stevenson
The Journal of Immunology, 2002journals.aai.org
DNA vaccines can activate immunity against tumor Ags expressed as MHC class I-
associated peptides. However, priming of CD8+ CTL against weak tumor Ags may require
adjuvant molecules. We have used a pathogen-derived sequence from tetanus toxin
(fragment C (FrC)) fused to tumor Ag sequences to promote Ab and CD4+ T cell responses.
For induction of CD8+ T cell responses, the FrC sequence has been engineered to remove
potentially competitive MHC class I-binding epitopes and to improve presentation of tumor …
Abstract
DNA vaccines can activate immunity against tumor Ags expressed as MHC class I-associated peptides. However, priming of CD8+ CTL against weak tumor Ags may require adjuvant molecules. We have used a pathogen-derived sequence from tetanus toxin (fragment C (FrC)) fused to tumor Ag sequences to promote Ab and CD4+ T cell responses. For induction of CD8+ T cell responses, the FrC sequence has been engineered to remove potentially competitive MHC class I-binding epitopes and to improve presentation of tumor epitopes. The colon carcinoma CT26 expresses an endogenous retroviral gene product, gp70, containing a known H2-L d-restricted epitope (AH1). A DNA vaccine encoding gp70 alone was a poor inducer of CTL, and performance was not significantly improved by fusion of full-length FrC. However, use of a minimized domain of FrC, with the AH1 sequence fused to the 3′ position, led to rapid induction of high levels of CTL. IFN-γ-producing epitope-specific CTL were detectable ex vivo and these killed CT26 targets in vitro. The single epitope vaccine was more effective than GM-CSF-transfected CT26 tumor cells in inducing an AH1-specific CTL response and equally effective in providing protection against tumor challenge. Levels of AH1-specific CTL in vivo were increased following injection of tumor cells, and CTL expanded in vitro were able to kill CT26 cells in tumor bearers. Pre-existing immunity to tetanus toxoid had no effect on the induction of AH1-specific CTL. These data demonstrate the power of epitope-specific CTL against tumor cells and illustrate a strategy for priming immunity via a dual component DNA vaccine.
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