4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Harnessing DNA-induced immune responses for improving cancer vaccines

Journal

HUMAN VACCINES & IMMUNOTHERAPEUTICS
Volume 8, Issue 11, Pages 1682-1693

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.4161/hv.22345

Keywords

DNA vaccine; DNA electroporation; innate immunity; adaptive immunity; cancer vaccines

Funding

  1. CONICYT Program [PFB-16]
  2. CONICYT [791100038]
  3. FONDECYT [11110525]
  4. CORFO-Innova [12IDL2-13348]

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DNA vaccines have emerged as an attractive strategy to promote protective cellular and humoral immunity against the encoded antigen. DNA vaccines are easy to generate, inexpensive to produce and purify at large-scale, highly stable and safe. In addition, plasmids used for DNA vaccines act as powerful danger signals by stimulating several DNA-sensing innate immune receptors that promote the induction of protective adaptive immunity. The induction of tumor-specific immune responses represents a major challenge for DNA vaccines because most of tumor-associated antigens are normal non-mutated self-antigens. As a consequence, induction of potentially self-reactive T cell responses against such poorly immunogenic antigens is controlled by mechanisms of central and peripheral tolerance as well as tumor-induced immunosuppression. Although several DNA vaccines against cancer have reached clinical testing, disappointing results have been observed. Therefore, the development of new adjuvants that strongly stimulate the induction of antitumor T cell immunity and counteract immune-suppressive regulation is an attractive approach to enhance the potency of DNA vaccines and overcome tumor-associated tolerance. Understanding the DNA-sensing signaling pathways of innate immunity that mediate the induction of T cell responses elicited by DNA vaccines represents a unique opportunity to develop novel adjuvants that enhance vaccine potency. The advance of DNA adjuvants needs to be complemented with the development of potent delivery systems, in order to step toward successful clinical application. Here, we briefly discuss recent evidence showing how to harness DNA-induced immune response to improve the potency of cancer vaccines and counteract tumor-associated tolerance.

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