| |
|
      |
|
|
Abstracts
Immunotherapy of a human papillomavirus (HPV) type 16 E7-expressing
tumour by administration of fusion protein comprising Mycobacterium
bovis bacille Calmette-Guerin (BCG) hsp65 and HPV16 E7.
Clin Exp Immunol 2000 121(2): 216-225
Chu N.R. (1), Wu H.B. (1), Wu T. (2), Boux
L.J.(2), Siegel M.I. (2), Mizzen L.A. (1)
1) Stressgen Biotechnologies Corporation, Victoria,
BC, Canada,
2) Department of Pathology, Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions,
Baltimore, MD, USA and
3) Stressgen Biotechnologies Inc., Collegeville, PA, USA
Human papillomavirus type 16 (HPV16) infection
has been linked to the development of cervical and anal dysplasia
and cancer. One hallmark of persistent infection is the synthesis
of the viral E7 protein in cervical epithelial cells. The expression
of E7 in dysplastic and transformed cells and its recognition by
the immune system as a foreign antigen make it an ideal target for
immunotherapy. Utilizing the E7-expressing murine tumour cell line,
TC-1, as a model of cervical carcinoma, an immunotherapy based on
the administration of an adjuvant-free fusion protein comprising
Mycobacterium bovis BCG heat shock protein (hsp)65 linked to HPV16
E7 (hspE7) has been developed.
The data show that prophylactic immunization with
hspE7 protects mice against challenge with TC-1 cells and that these
tumour-free animals are also protected against re-challenge with
TC-1 cells. In addition, therapeutic immunization with hspE7 induces
regression of palpable tumours, confers protection against tumour
re-challenge and is associated with long-term survival (> 253 days).
In vitro analyses indicated that immunization with hspE7 leads to
the induction of a Th1-like cell-mediated immune response based
on the pattern of secreted cytokines and the presence of cytolytic
activity following antigenic recall. In vivo studies using mice
with targeted mutations in CD8 or MHC class II or depleted of CD8
or CD4 lymphocyte subsets demonstrate that tumour regression following
therapeutic hspE7 immunization is CD8-dependent and CD4-independent.
These studies extend previous observations on the induction of cytotoxic
T lymphocytes by hsp fusion proteins and are consistent with the
clinical application of hspE7 as an immunotherapy for human cervical
and anal dysplasia and cancer.
|
|