Enhanced generation of cytotoxic T lymphocytes using recombinant vaccinia virus expressing human tumor-associated antigens and B7 costimulatory molecules |
| |
Authors: | P Zajac A Schütz D Oertli C Noppen C Schaefer M Heberer GC Spagnoli WR Marti |
| |
Affiliation: | Department of Surgery, University of Basel, Center for Teaching and Research, Switzerland. |
| |
Abstract: | ![]() In this work, we addressed the possibility to enhance the "in vitro" generation of CTLs recognizing tumor-associated antigens (TAAs) by using an inactivated recombinant vaccinia virus encoding B7.1 and B7.2 costimulatory molecules (rVV-B7.1/2). Antigen presenting cells (APCs) infected by rVV-B7.1/2 and pulsed with MART-1/Melan-A27-35 HLA-A2.1-restricted peptide induced significantly higher specific cytotoxic activity than peptide-loaded APCs infected by wild-type VV, both in VV-sensitized and naive donors. When APCs were infected with a rVV encoding both MART-1/Melan-A27-35 and B7-1/2 (rVV-B7.1/2-M), a significantly more effective CTL generation was observed as compared with cultures stimulated by APCs infected with a rVV encoding the TAA epitope only (rVV-M). These enhancing effects were detectable irrespective of a previous VV-specific sensitization. Most importantly, fibroblasts, devoid of antigen-presenting capacity upon peptide pulsing or infection with rVV-M, could be turned into effective APCs after infection by rVV encoding TAA epitopes and costimulatory molecules. In these experiments, by using separate recombinant viral constructs, we observed a predominant role of B7-1 as compared with B7-2 in the induction of TAA-specific CTLs. Taken together, our data indicate that replication-incompetent rVV encoding TAA epitopes and costimulatory molecules are able to induce highly effective generation of tumor-specific CTLs. Therefore, these vectors could represent valuable clinical tools for immunotherapy of melanoma patients. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|