Fully Synthetic TF-Based Self-Adjuvanting Vaccine Simultaneously Triggers iNKT Cells and Mincle and Protects Mice against Tumor Development
Deying Yang, Xiaohui Li, Jinmei Li, Zichun Liu, Zichun Liu, Tongtong Li, Pan Liao, Xiang Luo, Zhongqiu Liu, Zhongqiu Liu, Wenbo Ming, Guochao Liao
Abstract
The Thomsen–Friedenreich (TF) antigen has proven to be a promising target for developing novel therapeutic cancer vaccines. Here, a new strategy that TF antigen covalently coupled with KRN7000 and vizantin was developed. The resulting three-component vaccine KRN7000-TF-vizantin simultaneously triggers invariant natural killer T (iNKT) cells and macrophage-inducible C-type lectin (Mincle) signaling pathways, eliciting much stronger TF-specific immune responses than glycoprotein vaccine TF-KLH/alum and the corresponding two-component conjugate vaccines TF-KRN7000 and TF-vizantin. The analysis of IgG isotypes and the secretion of cytokines revealed that KRN7000-TF-vizantin induced Th1/Th2 mixed immune responses, where Th1 was dominant. In vivo experiments demonstrated that KRN7000-TF-vizantin increased the survival rate and survival time of tumor-challenged mice, and surviving mice rejected further tumor attacks without any additional treatment. This work demonstrates that covalently coupled KRN7000 and vizantin could serve as a promising TF-based vaccine carrier for antitumor immune therapy, and KRN7000-TF-vizantin features great potential to be a vaccine candidate.