A comparison and critical analysis of preclinical anticancer vaccination strategies

被引:28
作者
Kochenderfer, J. N. [1 ]
Gress, R. E. [1 ]
机构
[1] NIH, Natl Canc Inst, Expt Transplant & Immunol Branch, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
关键词
vaccination; tumor immunity; peptides; cytokines; T cells; adoptive T-cell therapy; CpG oligodeoxynucleotides;
D O I
10.3181/0702-MR-42
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
Anticancer vaccines have been extensively studied in animal models and in clinical trials. While vaccination can lead to tumor protection in numerous murine models, objective tumor regressions after anticancer vaccination in clinical trials have been rare. B16 is a poorly immunogenic murine melanoma that has been extensively used in anticancer vaccination experiments. Because B16 has been widely used, different vaccination strategies can be compared. We reviewed the results obtained when B16 was treated with five common vaccine types: recombinant viral vaccines, DNA vaccines, dendritic cell vaccines, whole-tumor vaccines, and peptide vaccines. We also reviewed the results obtained when B16 was treated with vaccines combined with adoptive transfer of tumor antigen-specific T cells. We found several characteristics of vaccination regimens that were associated with antitumor efficacy. Many vaccines that incorporated xenogeneic antigens exhibited more potent anticancer activity than vaccines that were identical except that they incorporated the syngeneic version of the same antigen. Interleukin-2 enhanced the antitumor efficacy of several vaccines. Finally, several effective regimens generated large numbers of tumor antigen-specific CD8(+) T cells. Identification of vaccine characteristics that are associated with antitumor efficacy may aid in the development of more effective anticancer vaccination strategies.
引用
收藏
页码:1128 / 1139
页数:12
相关论文
共 66 条
[1]   PEPTIDES IN POSITIVE AND NEGATIVE SELECTION - A DELICATE BALANCE [J].
ALLEN, PM .
CELL, 1994, 76 (04) :593-596
[2]   Divergent therapeutic and immunologic effects of oligodeoxynucleotides with distinct CpG motifs [J].
Ballas, ZK ;
Krieg, AM ;
Warren, T ;
Rasmussen, W ;
Davis, HL ;
Waldschmidt, M ;
Weiner, GJ .
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2001, 167 (09) :4878-4886
[3]   Relevance of the tumor antigen in the validation of three vaccination strategies for melanoma [J].
Bellone, M ;
Cantarella, D ;
Castiglioni, P ;
Crosti, MC ;
Ronchetti, A ;
Moro, M ;
Garancini, MP ;
Casorati, G ;
Dellabona, P .
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2000, 165 (05) :2651-2656
[4]   Identification of tyrosinase-related protein 2 as a tumor rejection antigen for the B16 melanoma [J].
Bloom, MB ;
PerryLalley, D ;
Robbins, PF ;
Li, Y ;
ElGamil, M ;
Rosenberg, SA ;
Yang, JC .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE, 1997, 185 (03) :453-459
[5]   Coupling and uncoupling of tumor immunity and autoimmunity [J].
Bowne, WB ;
Srinivasan, R ;
Wolchok, JD ;
Hawkins, WG ;
Blachere, NE ;
Dyall, R ;
Lewis, JJ ;
Houghton, AN .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE, 1999, 190 (11) :1717-1722
[6]   Antigen density presented by dendritic cells in vivo differentially affects the number and avidity of primary, memory, and recall CD8+ T cells [J].
Bullock, TNJ ;
Mullins, DW ;
Engelhard, VH .
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2003, 170 (04) :1822-1829
[7]   Recognition of fresh human tumor by human peripheral blood lymphocytes transduced with a bicistronic retroviral vector encoding a murine anti-p53 TCR [J].
Cohen, CJ ;
Zheng, ZL ;
Bray, R ;
Zhao, YB ;
Sherman, LA ;
Rosenberg, SA ;
Morgan, RA .
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2005, 175 (09) :5799-5808
[8]  
Davila E, 2003, CANCER RES, V63, P3281
[9]   Therapeutic effectiveness of recombinant cancer vaccines is associated with a prevalent T-cell receptor α usage by melanoma-speciflc CD8+ T lymphocytes [J].
De Palma, R ;
Marigo, I ;
Del Galdo, F ;
De Santo, C ;
Serafini, P ;
Cingarlini, S ;
Tüting, J ;
Lenz, J ;
Basso, G ;
Milan, G ;
Zanovello, P ;
Bronte, V .
CANCER RESEARCH, 2004, 64 (21) :8068-8076
[10]   CD8+ T cell tolerance and cancer immunotherapy [J].
de Visser, KE ;
Schumacher, TNM ;
Kruisbeek, AM .
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOTHERAPY, 2003, 26 (01) :1-11