4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Optimized DNA vaccines to specifically induce therapeutic CD8 T cell responses against autochthonous breast tumors

Journal

CANCER IMMUNOLOGY IMMUNOTHERAPY
Volume 57, Issue 11, Pages 1695-1703

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00262-008-0465-x

Keywords

DNA vaccines; HER2/neu; CD8 T cells; breast cancer; animal models

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [R01CA103921, R01CA80782, R01 CA080782-08, R01 CA103921, R01 CA103921-07, R01 CA080782-09, R01 CA080782, P50CA91956, P50 CA091956, P50 CA091956-020004] Funding Source: Medline

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Background Vaccines capable of inducing CD8 T cell responses to antigens expressed by tumor cells are considered as attractive choices for the treatment and prevention of malignant diseases. Our group has previously reported that immunization with synthetic peptide corresponding to a CD8 T cell epitope derived from the rat neu (rNEU) oncogene administered together with a Toll-like receptor agonist as adjuvant, induced immune responses that translated into prophylactic and therapeutic benefit against autochthonous tumors in an animal model of breast cancer (BALB-neuT mice). DNA-based vaccines offer some advantages over peptide vaccines, such as the possibility of including multiple CD8 T cell epitopes in a single construct. Materials and methods Plasmids encoding a fragment of rNEU were designed to elicit CD8 T cell responses but no antibody responses. We evaluated the use of the modified plasmids as DNA vaccines for their ability to generate effective CD8 T cell responses against breast tumors expressing rNEU. Results DNA-based vaccines using modified plasmids were very effective in specifically stimulating tumor-reactive CD8 T cell responses. Moreover, vaccination with the modified DNA plasmids resulted in significant anti-tumor effects that were mediated by CD8 T cells without the requirement of generating antibodies to the product of rNEU. Conclusions DNA vaccination is a viable alternative to peptide vaccination to induce potent anti-tumor CD8 T cell responses that provide effective therapeutic benefit. These results bear importance for the design of DNA vaccines for the treatment and prevention of cancer.

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