1. A DNA telomerase vaccine for canine cancer immunotherapy
- Author
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Pascal Clayette, Anne-Sophie Pailhes-Jimenez, Anna Kostrzak, Thomas Bestetti, Marion Julithe, Christine Kreuz, Simon Wain-Hobson, Pierre Langlade-Demoyen, Gabriel Chamel, Jessie Thalmensi, Christelle Liard, Emmanuèle Bourges, Ludovic Bourré, Elodie Pliquet, Marie Escande, Olivier Keravel, and Thierry Huet
- Subjects
DNA vaccine ,0301 basic medicine ,Telomerase ,medicine.medical_treatment ,DNA vaccination ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Cancer immunotherapy ,medicine ,cancer ,Telomerase reverse transcriptase ,business.industry ,Electro-Gene-Transfer ,ELISPOT ,Cancer ,Immunotherapy ,medicine.disease ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,canine TERT ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Cancer research ,immunotherapy ,Cancer vaccine ,business ,Research Paper - Abstract
Telomerase reverse transcriptase (TERT) is highly expressed in more than 90% of canine cancer cells and low to absent in normal cells. Given that immune tolerance to telomerase is easily broken both naturally and experimentally, telomerase is an attractive tumor associated antigen for cancer immunotherapy. Indeed, therapeutic trials using human telomerase peptides have been performed. We have developed an immunogenic yet catalytically inactive human telomerase DNA construct that is in clinical trials with patients presenting solid tumors. Paralleling this human construct, we have developed a canine telomerase DNA vaccine, called pDUV5. When administered intradermally to mice combined with electrogene transfer, pDUV5 induced canine TERT specific cytotoxic T-cells as measured by IFN-γ ELISpot assay. Intradermal vaccination of healthy dogs with 400 μg of pDUV5 generated strong, broad and long lasting TERT specific cellular immune responses. In vitro immunization with cTERT peptides revealed the maintenance of cTERT specific T-cells in PBMCs from tumor bearing dogs showing that this repertoire was not depleted. This study highlights the potential of pDUV5 as a cancer vaccine and supports its evaluation for the treatment of spontaneous canine tumors.
- Published
- 2019