scholarly journals HER2/neu-Based Peptide Vaccination-Pulsed with B-Cell Epitope Induced Efficient Prophylactic and Therapeutic Antitumor Activities in TUBO Breast Cancer Mice Model

Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (19) ◽  
pp. 4958
Author(s):  
Muhammad Luqman Nordin ◽  
Abdin Shakirin Mohamad Norpi ◽  
Pei Yuen Ng ◽  
Khatijah Yusoff ◽  
Nadiah Abu ◽  
...  

Breast cancer is the most common invasive cancer diagnosed among women. A cancer vaccine has been recognized as a form of immunotherapy with a prominent position in the prevention and treatment of breast cancer. The majority of current breast cancer vaccination strategies aim to stimulate antitumor T-cell responses of the HER2/neu oncogene, which is abnormally expressed in breast cancer cells. However, the role of the B-cell humoral response is often underappreciated in the cancer vaccine design. We have advanced this idea by elucidating the role of B-cells in cancer vaccination by designing a chimeric antigenic peptide possessing both cytotoxic T lymphocytes (GP2) and B-cell (P4) peptide epitopes derived from HER2/neu. The chimeric peptide (GP2–P4) was further conjugated to a carrier protein (KLH), forming a KLH–GP2–P4 conjugate. The immunogenicity of KLH–GP2–P4 was compared with KLH–GP2 (lacking the B-cell epitope) in BALB/c mice. Mice immunized with KLH–GP2–P4 elicited more potent antigen-specific neutralizing antibodies against syngeneic TUBO cells (cancer cell line overexpressing HER2/neu) that was governed by a balanced Th1/Th2 polarization in comparison to KLH–GP2. Subsequently, these immune responses led to greater inhibition of tumor growth and longer survival in TUBO tumor-bearing mice in both prophylactic and therapeutic challenge experiments. Overall, our data demonstrated that the B-cell epitope has a profound effect in orchestrating an efficacious antitumor immunity. Thus, a multi-epitope peptide vaccine encompassing cytotoxic T-lymphocytes, T-helper and B-cell epitopes represents a promising strategy in developing cancer vaccines with a preventive and therapeutic modality for the effective management of breast cancer.

Author(s):  
Pravin TP Kaumaya

In light of the numerous US FDA-approved humanized monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) for cancer immunotherapy, it is surprising that the advancement of B-cell epitope vaccines designed to elicit a natural humoral polyclonal antibody response has not gained traction in the immune-oncology landscape. Passive immunotherapy with humanized mAbs (Trastuzumab [Herceptin®]; Pertuzumab [Perjeta®]) has provided clinical benefit to breast cancer patients, albeit with significant shortcomings including toxicity problems and resistance, high costs, sophisticated therapeutic regimen and long half-life. The role of B-cell humoral immunity in cancer is under appreciated and underdeveloped. We have advanced the idea of active immunotherapy with chimeric B-cell epitope peptides incorporating a ‘promiscuous’ T-cell epitope that elicits a polyclonal antibody response, which provides safe, cost–effective therapeutic advantage over mAbs. We have created a portfolio of validated B-cell peptide epitopes against multiple receptor tyrosine kinases (HER-1, HER-3, IGF-1R and VEGF). We have successfully translated two HER-2 combination B-cell peptide vaccines in Phase I and II clinical trials. We have recently developed an effective novel programmed cell death-1 vaccine. In this article, I will review our approaches and strategies that focus on B-cell epitope cancer vaccines.


Author(s):  
Zaytsev Sergey ◽  
Motin Vladimir ◽  
Khizhnyakova Mariya ◽  
Feodorova Valentina Anatolievna ◽  
Elena Lyapina ◽  
...  

1997 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 81-87 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabelle Bourgault Villada ◽  
Lorenzo Mortara ◽  
Anne Marie Aubertin ◽  
Hélène Gras-Masse ◽  
Jean Paul Lévy ◽  
...  

Virology ◽  
1998 ◽  
Vol 249 (1) ◽  
pp. 21-31 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard A. Santos ◽  
Jorge A. Padilla ◽  
Christopher Hatfield ◽  
Charles Grose

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