Litcius/Paper detail

An engineered Accum‐E7 protein‐based vaccine with dual anti‐cervical cancer activity

Jean‐Pierre Bikorimana, Jamilah Abusarah, Marina Gonçalves, Roudy Farah, Wael Saad, Sébastien Talbot, Daniela Stanga, Simon Beaudoin, Sebastien Plouffe, Moutih Rafei

2024Cancer Science14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Worldwide prevalence of cervical cancer decreased significantly with the use of human papilloma virus (HPV)‐targeted prophylactic vaccines. However, these multivalent antiviral vaccines are inert against established tumors, which leave patients with surgical ablative options possibly resulting in long‐term reproductive complications and morbidity. In an attempt to bypass this unmet medical need, we designed a new E7 protein‐based vaccine formulation using Accum™, a technology platform designed to promote endosome‐to‐cytosol escape as a means to enhance protein accumulation in target cells. Prophylactic vaccination of immunocompetent mice using the Accum‐E7 vaccine (aE7) leads to complete protection from cervical cancer despite multiple challenges conducted with ascending C3.43 cellular doses (0.5‐, 1.0‐, and 2.0 × 10 6 cells). Moreover, the humoral response induced by aE7 was higher in magnitude compared with naked E7 protein vaccination and displayed potent inhibitory effects on C3.43 proliferation in vitro. When administered therapeutically to animals with pre‐established C3.43 or Tal3 tumors, the vaccine‐induced response synergized with multiple immune checkpoint blockers (anti‐PD‐1, anti‐CTLA4, and anti‐CD47) to effectively control tumor growth. Mechanistically, the observed therapeutic effect requires cross‐presenting dendritic cells as well as CD8 T cells predominantly, with a non‐negligible role played by both CD4 + and CD19 + lymphocytes. good laboratory practice (GLP) studies revealed that aE7 is immunogenic and well tolerated by immunocompetent mice with no observed adverse effects despite the use of a fourfold exceeding dose. In a nutshell, aE7 represents an ideal vaccine candidate for further clinical development as it uses a single engineered protein capable of exhibiting both prophylactic and therapeutic activity.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineVaccinationImmune systemCervical cancerCD8ImmunologyCancerAdverse effectCD19Cancer researchPharmacologyInternal medicineImmunotherapy and Immune ResponsesCancer Immunotherapy and BiomarkersRNA Interference and Gene Delivery