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Peptides-Coated Oncolytic Vaccines for Cancer Personalized Medicine

Oncolytic Viruses (OVs) work through two main mechanisms of action: the direct lysis of the virus-infected cancer cells and the release of tumor antigens as a result of the viral burst. In this sc.enario, the OVs act as in situ cancer vaccines, since the immunogenicity of the virus is combined with...

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Autores principales: Feola, Sara, Russo, Salvatore, Martins, Beatriz, Lopes, Alessandra, Vandermeulen, Gaëlle, Fluhler, Vinciane, De Giorgi, Camilla, Fusciello, Manlio, Pesonen, Sari, Ylösmäki, Erkko, Antignani, Gabriella, Chiaro, Jacopo, Hamdan, Firas, Feodoroff, Michaela, Grönholm, Mikaela, Cerullo, Vincenzo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9047942/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35493448
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.826164
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author Feola, Sara
Russo, Salvatore
Martins, Beatriz
Lopes, Alessandra
Vandermeulen, Gaëlle
Fluhler, Vinciane
De Giorgi, Camilla
Fusciello, Manlio
Pesonen, Sari
Ylösmäki, Erkko
Antignani, Gabriella
Chiaro, Jacopo
Hamdan, Firas
Feodoroff, Michaela
Grönholm, Mikaela
Cerullo, Vincenzo
author_facet Feola, Sara
Russo, Salvatore
Martins, Beatriz
Lopes, Alessandra
Vandermeulen, Gaëlle
Fluhler, Vinciane
De Giorgi, Camilla
Fusciello, Manlio
Pesonen, Sari
Ylösmäki, Erkko
Antignani, Gabriella
Chiaro, Jacopo
Hamdan, Firas
Feodoroff, Michaela
Grönholm, Mikaela
Cerullo, Vincenzo
author_sort Feola, Sara
collection PubMed
description Oncolytic Viruses (OVs) work through two main mechanisms of action: the direct lysis of the virus-infected cancer cells and the release of tumor antigens as a result of the viral burst. In this sc.enario, the OVs act as in situ cancer vaccines, since the immunogenicity of the virus is combined with tumor antigens, that direct the specificity of the anti-tumor adaptive immune response. However, this mechanism in some cases fails in eliciting a strong specific T cell response. One way to overcome this problem and enhance the priming efficiency is the production of genetically modified oncolytic viruses encoding one or more tumor antigens. To avoid the long and expensive process related to the engineering of the OVs, we have exploited an approach based on coating OVs (adenovirus and vaccinia virus) with tumor antigens. In this work, oncolytic viruses encoding tumor antigens and tumor antigen decorated adenoviral platform (PeptiCRAd) have been used as cancer vaccines and evaluated both for their prophylactic and therapeutic efficacy. We have first tested the oncolytic vaccines by exploiting the OVA model, moving then to TRP2, a more clinically relevant tumor antigen. Finally, both approaches have been investigated in tumor neo-antigens settings. Interestingly, both genetically modified oncolytic adenovirus and PeptiCRAd elicited T cells-specific anti-tumor responses. However, in vitro cross-representation experiments, showed an advantage of PeptiCRAd as regards the fast presentation of the model epitope SIINFEKL from OVA in an immunogenic rather than tolerogenic fashion. Here two approaches used as cancer oncolytic vaccines have been explored and characterized for their efficacy. Although the generation of specific anti-tumor T cells was elicited in both approaches, PeptiCRAd retains the advantage of being rapidly adaptable by coating the adenovirus with a different set of tumor antigens, which is crucial in personalized cancer vaccines clinical setting.
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spelling pubmed-90479422022-04-29 Peptides-Coated Oncolytic Vaccines for Cancer Personalized Medicine Feola, Sara Russo, Salvatore Martins, Beatriz Lopes, Alessandra Vandermeulen, Gaëlle Fluhler, Vinciane De Giorgi, Camilla Fusciello, Manlio Pesonen, Sari Ylösmäki, Erkko Antignani, Gabriella Chiaro, Jacopo Hamdan, Firas Feodoroff, Michaela Grönholm, Mikaela Cerullo, Vincenzo Front Immunol Immunology Oncolytic Viruses (OVs) work through two main mechanisms of action: the direct lysis of the virus-infected cancer cells and the release of tumor antigens as a result of the viral burst. In this sc.enario, the OVs act as in situ cancer vaccines, since the immunogenicity of the virus is combined with tumor antigens, that direct the specificity of the anti-tumor adaptive immune response. However, this mechanism in some cases fails in eliciting a strong specific T cell response. One way to overcome this problem and enhance the priming efficiency is the production of genetically modified oncolytic viruses encoding one or more tumor antigens. To avoid the long and expensive process related to the engineering of the OVs, we have exploited an approach based on coating OVs (adenovirus and vaccinia virus) with tumor antigens. In this work, oncolytic viruses encoding tumor antigens and tumor antigen decorated adenoviral platform (PeptiCRAd) have been used as cancer vaccines and evaluated both for their prophylactic and therapeutic efficacy. We have first tested the oncolytic vaccines by exploiting the OVA model, moving then to TRP2, a more clinically relevant tumor antigen. Finally, both approaches have been investigated in tumor neo-antigens settings. Interestingly, both genetically modified oncolytic adenovirus and PeptiCRAd elicited T cells-specific anti-tumor responses. However, in vitro cross-representation experiments, showed an advantage of PeptiCRAd as regards the fast presentation of the model epitope SIINFEKL from OVA in an immunogenic rather than tolerogenic fashion. Here two approaches used as cancer oncolytic vaccines have been explored and characterized for their efficacy. Although the generation of specific anti-tumor T cells was elicited in both approaches, PeptiCRAd retains the advantage of being rapidly adaptable by coating the adenovirus with a different set of tumor antigens, which is crucial in personalized cancer vaccines clinical setting. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-04-14 /pmc/articles/PMC9047942/ /pubmed/35493448 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.826164 Text en Copyright © 2022 Feola, Russo, Martins, Lopes, Vandermeulen, Fluhler, De Giorgi, Fusciello, Pesonen, Ylösmäki, Antignani, Chiaro, Hamdan, Feodoroff, Grönholm and Cerullo https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Immunology
Feola, Sara
Russo, Salvatore
Martins, Beatriz
Lopes, Alessandra
Vandermeulen, Gaëlle
Fluhler, Vinciane
De Giorgi, Camilla
Fusciello, Manlio
Pesonen, Sari
Ylösmäki, Erkko
Antignani, Gabriella
Chiaro, Jacopo
Hamdan, Firas
Feodoroff, Michaela
Grönholm, Mikaela
Cerullo, Vincenzo
Peptides-Coated Oncolytic Vaccines for Cancer Personalized Medicine
title Peptides-Coated Oncolytic Vaccines for Cancer Personalized Medicine
title_full Peptides-Coated Oncolytic Vaccines for Cancer Personalized Medicine
title_fullStr Peptides-Coated Oncolytic Vaccines for Cancer Personalized Medicine
title_full_unstemmed Peptides-Coated Oncolytic Vaccines for Cancer Personalized Medicine
title_short Peptides-Coated Oncolytic Vaccines for Cancer Personalized Medicine
title_sort peptides-coated oncolytic vaccines for cancer personalized medicine
topic Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9047942/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35493448
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.826164
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