Dendritic Cell Based PSMA Immunotherapy for Prostate Cancer Using a CD40-Targeted Adenovirus Vector
Author(s) -
Briana J. Williams,
Shilpa Bhatia,
Lisa K. Adams,
Susan Boling,
Jennifer L. Carroll,
Xiaolin Li,
Donna Rogers,
Nikolay Korokhov,
Imre Kovesdi,
Alexander Pereboev,
David T. Curiel,
J. Michael Mathis
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0046981
Subject(s) - prostate cancer , ex vivo , immunotherapy , cancer research , glutamate carboxypeptidase ii , antigen , cd40 , viral vector , genetic enhancement , antigen presentation , medicine , cancer immunotherapy , ctl* , t cell , dendritic cell , immunology , in vivo , cancer , immune system , biology , cytotoxic t cell , in vitro , cd8 , recombinant dna , gene , microbiology and biotechnology , biochemistry
Human prostate tumor vaccine and gene therapy trials using ex vivo methods to prime dendritic cells (DCs) with prostate specific membrane antigen (PSMA) have been somewhat successful, but to date the lengthy ex vivo manipulation of DCs has limited the widespread clinical utility of this approach. Our goal was to improve upon cancer vaccination with tumor antigens by delivering PSMA via a CD40-targeted adenovirus vector directly to DCs as an efficient means for activation and antigen presentation to T-cells. To test this approach, we developed a mouse model of prostate cancer by generating clonal derivatives of the mouse RM-1 prostate cancer cell line expressing human PSMA (RM-1-PSMA cells). To maximize antigen presentation in target cells, both MHC class I and TAP protein expression was induced in RM-1 cells by transduction with an Ad vector expressing interferon-gamma ( Ad5-IFNγ ). Administering DCs infected ex vivo with CD40-targeted Ad5-huPSMA , as well as direct intraperitoneal injection of the vector, resulted in high levels of tumor-specific CTL responses against RM-1-PSMA cells pretreated with Ad5-IFNγ as target cells. CD40 targeting significantly improved the therapeutic antitumor efficacy of Ad5-huPSMA encoding PSMA when combined with Ad5-IFNγ in the RM-1-PSMA model. These results suggest that a CD-targeted adenovirus delivering PSMA may be effective clinically for prostate cancer immunotherapy.
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