AI Article Synopsis

  • Tumor-reactive T cells are essential for fighting tumors, but traditional DNA vaccines are slow and not very effective, prompting the study of an electroporation-mediated vaccine targeting a specific tumor variant (pEGFRvIII) combined with adoptive cell therapy (ACT).
  • The research involved testing the effectiveness of the pEGFRvIII vaccine in mice using various methods like immunofluorescence, flow cytometry, and cytotoxicity assays to assess T cell responses and tumor growth inhibition.
  • Results showed that while the vaccine alone had limited impact on tumor growth, pairing it with ACT from healthy donors produced a strong anti-tumor response, highlighting the potential of this combination approach for treating tumors.

Article Abstract

Background: Tumor-reactive T cells play a crucial role in anti-tumor responses, but T cells induced by DNA vaccination are time-consuming processes and exhibit limited anti-tumor efficacy. Therefore, we evaluated the anti-tumor effectiveness of reactive T cells elicited by electroporation (EP)-mediated DNA vaccine targeting epidermal growth factor receptor variant III (pEGFRvIII plasmid), in conjunction with adoptive cell therapy (ACT), involving the transfer of lymphocytes from a pEGFRvIII EP-vaccinated healthy donor.

Methods: The validation of the established pEGFRvIII plasmid and EGFRvIII-positive cell model was confirmed through immunofluorescence and western blot analysis. Flow cytometry and cytotoxicity assays were performed to evaluate the functionality of antigen-specific reactive T cells induced by EP-mediated pEGFRvIII vaccines, ACT, or their combination. The anti-tumor effectiveness of EP-mediated pEGFRvIII vaccines alone or combined with ACT was evaluated in the B16F10-EGFRvIII tumor model.

Results: EP-mediated pEGFRvIII vaccines elicited serum antibodies and a robust cellular immune response in both healthy and tumor-bearing mice. However, this response only marginally inhibited early-stage tumor growth in established tumor models. EP-mediated pEGFRvIII vaccination followed by adoptive transfer of lymphocytes from vaccinated healthy donors led to notable anti-tumor efficacy, attributed to the synergistic action of antigen-specific CD4 Th1 cells supplemented by ACT and antigen-specific CD8 T cells elicited by the EP-mediated DNA vaccination.

Conclusions: Our preclinical studies results demonstrate an enhanced anti-tumor efficacy of EP-mediated DNA vaccination boosted with adoptively transferred, vaccinated healthy donor-derived allogeneic lymphocytes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11447239PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00262-024-03838-8DOI Listing

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