4.6 Article

A Mutated Prostatic Acid Phosphatase (PAP) Peptide-Based Vaccine Induces PAP-Specific CD8+ T Cells with Ex Vivo Cytotoxic Capacities in HHDII/DR1 Transgenic Mice

Journal

CANCERS
Volume 14, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/cancers14081970

Keywords

prostate cancer; castrate (hormone)-resistant PCa (CRPC); prostatic acid phosphatase (PAP); CAF (R) 09; immunotherapy; PBMC; HHDII/DR1 mice; Dextramer (TM)

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Funding

  1. John and Lucille van Geest Foundation
  2. Donald Brooke PhD Studentship
  3. Nottingham Trent University
  4. University Alliance DTA programme

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The study found that peripheral blood of prostate cancer patients exhibits immune responsiveness to the MutPAP42mer peptide, and immunization of mice produces T cell-driven immunity against wild-type PAP, suggesting the potential for generating protective anti-tumor immunity in prostate cancer patients.
Background: Current treatments for castrate (hormone)-resistant prostate cancer (CRPC) remain limited and are not curative, with a median survival from diagnosis of 23 months. The PAP-specific Sipuleucel-T vaccine, which was approved by the FDA in 2010, increases the Overall Survival (OS) by 4 months, but is extremely expensive. We have previously shown that a 15 amino accid (AA) PAP sequence-derived peptide could induce strong immune responses and delay the growth of murine TRAMP-C1 prostate tumors. We have now substituted one amino acid and elongated the sequence to include epitopes predicted to bind to several additional HLA haplotypes. Herein, we present the immunological properties of this 42mer-mutated PAP-derived sequence (MutPAP42mer). Methods: The presence of PAP-135-143 epitope-specific CD8(+) T cells in the blood of patients with prostate cancer (PCa) was assessed by flow cytometry using Dextramer (TM) technology. HHDII/ DR1 transgenic mice were immunized with mutated and non-mutated PAP-derived 42mer peptides in the presence of CAF (R) 09 or CpG ODN1826 (TLR-9 agonist) adjuvants. Vaccine-induced immune responses were measured by assessing the proportion and functionality of splenic PAP-specific T cells in vitro. Results: PAP-135-143 epitope-specific CD8(+) T cells were detected in the blood of patients with PCa and stimulation of PBMCs from patients with PCa with mutPAP42mer enhanced their capacity to kill human LNCaP PCa target cells expressing PAP. The MutPAP42mer peptide was significantly more immunogenic in HHDII/DR1 mice than the wild type sequence, and immunogenicity was further enhanced when combined with the CAF (R) 09 adjuvant. The vaccine induced secretory (IFN gamma and TNF alpha) and cytotoxic CD8(+) T cells and effector memory splenic T cells. Conclusions: The periphery of patients with PCa exhibits immune responsiveness to the MutPAP42mer peptide and immunization of mice induces/expands T cell-driven, wild-type PAP immunity, and therefore, has the potential to drive protective anti-tumor immunity in patients with PCa.

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