4.8 Article

A Potent Cancer Vaccine Adjuvant System for Particleization of Short, Synthetic CD8+ T Cell Epitopes

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 15, Issue 3, Pages 4357-4371

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.0c07680

Keywords

peptide; CD8(+) T cell; liposome; vaccine; cancer; immunotherapy

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 CA247771]
  2. National Science Foundation [DBI 0923133]
  3. Canadian Foundation for Innovation
  4. Quebec government
  5. McGill University

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A new vaccine adjuvant system was developed to induce strong cellular immune responses against multiple tumor cell lines, demonstrating durable immunity. The system showed the importance of stable particle formation for effective immune response induction and could control local and metastatic disease in a therapeutic setting.
Short major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I (MHC-I)- restricted peptides contain the minimal biochemical information to induce antigen (Ag)-specific CD8(+) cytotoxic T cell responses but are generally ineffective in doing so. To address this, we developed a cobalt-porphyrin (CoPoP) liposome vaccine adjuvant system that induces rapid particleization of conventional, short synthetic MHC-I epitopes, leading to strong cellular immune responses at nanogram dosing. Along with CoPoP (to induce particle formation of peptides), synthetic monophosphoryl lipid A (PHAD) and QS-21 immunostimulatory molecules were included in the liposome bilayer to generate the CPQ adjuvant system. In mice, immunization with a short MHC-I-restricted peptide, derived from glycoprotein 70 (gp70), admixed with CPQ safely generated functional, Ag-specific CD8(+) T cells, resulting in the rejection of multiple tumor cell lines, with durable immunity. When cobalt was omitted, the otherwise identical peptide and adjuvant components did not result in peptide binding and were incapable of inducing immune responses, demonstrating the importance of stable particle formation. Immunization with the liposomal vaccine was well-tolerated and could control local and metastatic disease in a therapeutic setting. Mechanistic studies showed that particle-based peptides were better taken up by antigen-presenting cells, where they were putatively released within endosomes and phagosomes for display on MHC-I surfaces. On the basis of the potency of the approach, the platform was demonstrated as a tool for in vivo epitope screening of peptide microlibraries comprising a hundred peptides.

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