Biomedicines (Feb 2016)

Direct Lymph Node Vaccination of Lentivector/Prostate-Specific Antigen is Safe and Generates Tissue-Specific Responses in Rhesus Macaques

  • Bryan C. Au,
  • Chyan-Jang Lee,
  • Orlay Lopez-Perez,
  • Warren Foltz,
  • Tania C. Felizardo,
  • James C.M. Wang,
  • Ju Huang,
  • Xin Fan,
  • Melissa Madden,
  • Alyssa Goldstein,
  • David A. Jaffray,
  • Badru Moloo,
  • J. Andrea McCart,
  • Jeffrey A. Medin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines4010006
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 1
p. 6

Abstract

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Anti-cancer immunotherapy is emerging from a nadir and demonstrating tangible benefits to patients. A variety of approaches are now employed. We are invoking antigen (Ag)-specific responses through direct injections of recombinant lentivectors (LVs) that encode sequences for tumor-associated antigens into multiple lymph nodes to optimize immune presentation/stimulation. Here we first demonstrate the effectiveness and antigen-specificity of this approach in mice challenged with prostate-specific antigen (PSA)-expressing tumor cells. Next we tested the safety and efficacy of this approach in two cohorts of rhesus macaques as a prelude to a clinical trial application. Our vector encodes the cDNA for rhesus macaque PSA and a rhesus macaque cell surface marker to facilitate vector titering and tracking. We utilized two independent injection schemas demarcated by the timing of LV administration. In both cohorts we observed marked tissue-specific responses as measured by clinical evaluations and magnetic resonance imaging of the prostate gland. Tissue-specific responses were sustained for up to six months—the end-point of the study. Control animals immunized against an irrelevant Ag were unaffected. We did not observe vector spread in test or control animals or perturbations of systemic immune parameters. This approach thus offers an “off-the-shelf” anti-cancer vaccine that could be made at large scale and injected into patients—even on an out-patient basis.

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