105 results on '"Reinhard Kirnbauer"'
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2. Supplementary Table S5 from Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell–like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Anna C. Obenauf, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Frank Stubenrauch, Arno Rütten, Eduardo Calonje, Lorenzo Cerroni, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Klaus J. Busam, Rajmohan Murali, Etienne Coyaud, Kamel Bachiri, Estelle Laurent, Thibault Kervarrec, Karl Mechtler, Michael Schutzbier, Alexander Schleiffer, Thomas L. Steinacker, Shona M. Cronin, Pauline S. Jung, Tobias Neumann, and Lukas Leiendecker
- Abstract
FISH probes.
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- 2023
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3. Supplementary Table S12 from Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell–like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Anna C. Obenauf, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Frank Stubenrauch, Arno Rütten, Eduardo Calonje, Lorenzo Cerroni, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Klaus J. Busam, Rajmohan Murali, Etienne Coyaud, Kamel Bachiri, Estelle Laurent, Thibault Kervarrec, Karl Mechtler, Michael Schutzbier, Alexander Schleiffer, Thomas L. Steinacker, Shona M. Cronin, Pauline S. Jung, Tobias Neumann, and Lukas Leiendecker
- Abstract
HPV42 consensus genomes.
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- 2023
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4. Supplementary Table S8 from Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell–like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Anna C. Obenauf, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Frank Stubenrauch, Arno Rütten, Eduardo Calonje, Lorenzo Cerroni, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Klaus J. Busam, Rajmohan Murali, Etienne Coyaud, Kamel Bachiri, Estelle Laurent, Thibault Kervarrec, Karl Mechtler, Michael Schutzbier, Alexander Schleiffer, Thomas L. Steinacker, Shona M. Cronin, Pauline S. Jung, Tobias Neumann, and Lukas Leiendecker
- Abstract
HPV42- and HPV16-E6 BioID.
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- 2023
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5. Supplementary Table S4 from Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell–like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Anna C. Obenauf, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Frank Stubenrauch, Arno Rütten, Eduardo Calonje, Lorenzo Cerroni, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Klaus J. Busam, Rajmohan Murali, Etienne Coyaud, Kamel Bachiri, Estelle Laurent, Thibault Kervarrec, Karl Mechtler, Michael Schutzbier, Alexander Schleiffer, Thomas L. Steinacker, Shona M. Cronin, Pauline S. Jung, Tobias Neumann, and Lukas Leiendecker
- Abstract
HPV42 integration sites in DPA.
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- 2023
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6. Supplementary Table S1 from Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell–like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Anna C. Obenauf, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Frank Stubenrauch, Arno Rütten, Eduardo Calonje, Lorenzo Cerroni, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Klaus J. Busam, Rajmohan Murali, Etienne Coyaud, Kamel Bachiri, Estelle Laurent, Thibault Kervarrec, Karl Mechtler, Michael Schutzbier, Alexander Schleiffer, Thomas L. Steinacker, Shona M. Cronin, Pauline S. Jung, Tobias Neumann, and Lukas Leiendecker
- Abstract
Sample-assay overview.
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- 2023
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7. Supplementary Table S2 from Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell–like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Anna C. Obenauf, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Frank Stubenrauch, Arno Rütten, Eduardo Calonje, Lorenzo Cerroni, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Klaus J. Busam, Rajmohan Murali, Etienne Coyaud, Kamel Bachiri, Estelle Laurent, Thibault Kervarrec, Karl Mechtler, Michael Schutzbier, Alexander Schleiffer, Thomas L. Steinacker, Shona M. Cronin, Pauline S. Jung, Tobias Neumann, and Lukas Leiendecker
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Viral abundance scores in ViroCap assay.
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- 2023
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8. Supplementary Table S13 from Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell–like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Anna C. Obenauf, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Frank Stubenrauch, Arno Rütten, Eduardo Calonje, Lorenzo Cerroni, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Klaus J. Busam, Rajmohan Murali, Etienne Coyaud, Kamel Bachiri, Estelle Laurent, Thibault Kervarrec, Karl Mechtler, Michael Schutzbier, Alexander Schleiffer, Thomas L. Steinacker, Shona M. Cronin, Pauline S. Jung, Tobias Neumann, and Lukas Leiendecker
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HPV42 genome sequence comparison.
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- 2023
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9. Supplementary Table S11 from Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell–like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Anna C. Obenauf, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Frank Stubenrauch, Arno Rütten, Eduardo Calonje, Lorenzo Cerroni, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Klaus J. Busam, Rajmohan Murali, Etienne Coyaud, Kamel Bachiri, Estelle Laurent, Thibault Kervarrec, Karl Mechtler, Michael Schutzbier, Alexander Schleiffer, Thomas L. Steinacker, Shona M. Cronin, Pauline S. Jung, Tobias Neumann, and Lukas Leiendecker
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DEG HPV+ vs. HPV- CESC/HNSCC.
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- 2023
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10. Supplementary Table S3 from Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell–like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Anna C. Obenauf, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Frank Stubenrauch, Arno Rütten, Eduardo Calonje, Lorenzo Cerroni, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Klaus J. Busam, Rajmohan Murali, Etienne Coyaud, Kamel Bachiri, Estelle Laurent, Thibault Kervarrec, Karl Mechtler, Michael Schutzbier, Alexander Schleiffer, Thomas L. Steinacker, Shona M. Cronin, Pauline S. Jung, Tobias Neumann, and Lukas Leiendecker
- Abstract
Viral genome coverage in ViroCap assay.
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- 2023
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11. Supplementary Table S10 from Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell–like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Anna C. Obenauf, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Frank Stubenrauch, Arno Rütten, Eduardo Calonje, Lorenzo Cerroni, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Klaus J. Busam, Rajmohan Murali, Etienne Coyaud, Kamel Bachiri, Estelle Laurent, Thibault Kervarrec, Karl Mechtler, Michael Schutzbier, Alexander Schleiffer, Thomas L. Steinacker, Shona M. Cronin, Pauline S. Jung, Tobias Neumann, and Lukas Leiendecker
- Abstract
HPV abundance scores TCGA.
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- 2023
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12. Data from Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell–like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Anna C. Obenauf, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Frank Stubenrauch, Arno Rütten, Eduardo Calonje, Lorenzo Cerroni, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Klaus J. Busam, Rajmohan Murali, Etienne Coyaud, Kamel Bachiri, Estelle Laurent, Thibault Kervarrec, Karl Mechtler, Michael Schutzbier, Alexander Schleiffer, Thomas L. Steinacker, Shona M. Cronin, Pauline S. Jung, Tobias Neumann, and Lukas Leiendecker
- Abstract
The skin is exposed to viral pathogens, but whether they contribute to the oncogenesis of skin cancers has not been systematically explored. Here we investigated 19 skin tumor types by analyzing off-target reads from commonly available next-generation sequencing data for viral pathogens. We identified human papillomavirus 42 (HPV42) in 96% (n = 45/47) of digital papillary adenocarcinoma (DPA), an aggressive cancer occurring on the fingers and toes. We show that HPV42, so far considered a nononcogenic, “low-risk” HPV, recapitulates the molecular hallmarks of oncogenic, “high-risk” HPVs. Using machine learning, we find that HPV-driven transformation elicits a germ cell–like transcriptional program conserved throughout all HPV-driven cancers (DPA, cervical carcinoma, and head and neck cancer). We further show that this germ cell–like transcriptional program, even when reduced to the top two genes (CDKN2A and SYCP2), serves as a fingerprint of oncogenic HPVs with implications for early detection, diagnosis, and therapy of all HPV-driven cancers.Significance:We identify HPV42 as a uniform driver of DPA and add a new member to the short list of tumorigenic viruses in humans. We discover that all oncogenic HPVs evoke a germ cell–like transcriptional program with important implications for detecting, diagnosing, and treating all HPV-driven cancers.See related commentary by Starrett et al., p. 17.This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1
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- 2023
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13. Supplementary Table S14 from Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell–like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Anna C. Obenauf, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Frank Stubenrauch, Arno Rütten, Eduardo Calonje, Lorenzo Cerroni, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Klaus J. Busam, Rajmohan Murali, Etienne Coyaud, Kamel Bachiri, Estelle Laurent, Thibault Kervarrec, Karl Mechtler, Michael Schutzbier, Alexander Schleiffer, Thomas L. Steinacker, Shona M. Cronin, Pauline S. Jung, Tobias Neumann, and Lukas Leiendecker
- Abstract
HPV42 genome structural variants.
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- 2023
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14. Supplementary Table S9 from Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell–like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Anna C. Obenauf, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Frank Stubenrauch, Arno Rütten, Eduardo Calonje, Lorenzo Cerroni, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Klaus J. Busam, Rajmohan Murali, Etienne Coyaud, Kamel Bachiri, Estelle Laurent, Thibault Kervarrec, Karl Mechtler, Michael Schutzbier, Alexander Schleiffer, Thomas L. Steinacker, Shona M. Cronin, Pauline S. Jung, Tobias Neumann, and Lukas Leiendecker
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HPV42- and HPV16-E7 BioID.
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- 2023
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15. Supplementary Table S6 from Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell–like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Anna C. Obenauf, Thomas Wiesner, Klaus G. Griewank, Frank Stubenrauch, Arno Rütten, Eduardo Calonje, Lorenzo Cerroni, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Klaus J. Busam, Rajmohan Murali, Etienne Coyaud, Kamel Bachiri, Estelle Laurent, Thibault Kervarrec, Karl Mechtler, Michael Schutzbier, Alexander Schleiffer, Thomas L. Steinacker, Shona M. Cronin, Pauline S. Jung, Tobias Neumann, and Lukas Leiendecker
- Abstract
HPV42 protein-coding mutations.
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- 2023
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16. Next generation L2-based HPV vaccines cross-protect against cutaneous papillomavirus infection and tumor development
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Melinda Ahmels, Filipe C. Mariz, Ilona Braspenning-Wesch, Sonja Stephan, Bettina Huber, Gabriele Schmidt, Rui Cao, Martin Müller, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Frank Rösl, and Daniel Hasche
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Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Papillomavirus Infections ,Immunology ,Oncogene Proteins, Viral ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,Mice ,Neutralization Tests ,Neoplasms ,Animals ,Humans ,Immunology and Allergy ,Capsid Proteins ,Papillomavirus Vaccines ,Vaccines, Virus-Like Particle ,Peptides ,Papillomaviridae - Abstract
Licensed L1-VLP-based immunizations against high-risk mucosal human papillomavirus (HPV) types have been a great success in reducing anogenital cancers, although they are limited in their cross-protection against HPV types not covered by the vaccine. Further, their utility in protection against cutaneous HPV types, of which some contribute to non-melanoma skin cancer (NMSC) development, is rather low. Next generation vaccines achieve broadly cross-protective immunity against highly conserved sequences of L2. In this exploratory study, we tested two novel HPV vaccine candidates, HPV16 RG1-VLP and CUT-PANHPVAX, in the preclinical natural infection model Mastomys coucha. After immunization with either vaccines, a mock control or MnPV L1-VLPs, the animals were experimentally infected and monitored. Besides vaccine-specific seroconversion against HPV L2 peptides, the animals also developed cross-reactive antibodies against the cutaneous Mastomys natalensis papillomavirus (MnPV) L2, which were cross-neutralizing MnPV pseudovirions in vitro. Further, both L2-based vaccines also conferred in vivo protection as the viral loads in plucked hair after experimental infection were lower compared to mock-vaccinated control animals. Importantly, the formation of neutralizing antibodies, whether directed against L1-VLPs or L2, was able to prevent skin tumor formation and even microscopical signs of MnPV infection in the skin. For the first time, our study shows the proof-of-principle of next generation L2-based vaccines even across different PV genera in an infection animal model with its genuine PV. It provides fundamental insights into the humoral immunity elicited by L2-based vaccines against PV-induced skin tumors, with important implications to the design of next generation HPV vaccines.
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- 2022
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17. HPV-Impfstoffe – zugelassene Vakzinen und experimenteller RG1-VLP-Impfstoff der nächsten Generation
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Saeed Shafti-Keramat, C. Schellenbacher, Bettina Huber, and Reinhard Kirnbauer
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0301 basic medicine ,Gynecology ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine.medical_specialty ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,business.industry ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,business - Abstract
ZusammenfassungInfektionen mit >12 sexuell übertragbaren genitalen „high-risk“ (hr) humanen Papillomviren (HPV) sind hauptverantwortlich für anogenitale Karzinome, insbesondere Zervix- und Analkarzinome sowie oropharyngeale Karzinome, insgesamt für 5 % der Karzinome weltweit. Genitale „low-risk“ (lr) HPV und kutane HPV verursachen Anogenitalwarzen (Kondylome) bzw. Hautwarzen, kutane Genus β‑HPV sind ein potenzieller Kofaktor für die Entwicklung nichtmelanozytärer Hautkarzinome in Immunsupprimierten. Die zugelassenen HPV-Vakzinen sind Spaltimpfstoffe bestehend aus leeren Hauptkapsidproteinhüllen (L1-virus-like particles, VLP). Die prophylaktische Impfung mit dem modernen nonavalenten Impfstoff Gardasil‑9 (HPV6/11/16/18/31/33/45/52/58) verhindert persistierende Infektionen mit Typen, die bis zu 90 % der Zervixkarzinome und Kondylome verursachen. Der Impfschutz ist vorwiegend typenspezifisch, daher besteht kein Schutz gegen Infektionen mit den übrigen genitalen hrHPV oder Hauttypen. RG1-VLP ist ein experimenteller „next generation“-Impfstoff, bestehend aus HPV16L1-VLP, welche ein Kreuzneutralisierungs-Epitop des HPV16 Nebenkapsidproteins L2 („RG1“; Aminosäuren 17–36) repetitiv (360×) an der Oberfläche tragen. Eine Vakzinierung mit RG1-VLP schützt im Tierversuch gegen experimentelle Infektionen mit allen relevanten genitalen hrHPV (~96 % aller Zervixkarzinome), lrHPV (~90 % der Kondylome) sowie gegen einige kutane und β‑HPV. Präklinische Daten zeigen langanhaltende Protektion ohne Boosterimmunisierung ein Jahr nach der Impfung sowie Wirksamkeit nach nur 2 Dosen. Auch in lyophilisierter, thermostabiler Form bleibt die Immunogenität der RG1-VLP erhalten. Eine Phase-I-Studie ist mit Unterstützung des US NCI/NIH in Vorbereitung. Der vorliegende Artikel diskutiert Fragestellungen zur HPV-Impfstoffoptimierung und präsentiert den pan-HPV-Impfstoffkandidat RG1-VLP.
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- 2021
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18. Polymerase-δ-deficiency as a novel cause of inborn cancer predisposition associated with human papillomavirus infection
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Johanna Strobl, Bettina Huber, Raul Jimenez Heredia, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Kaan Boztug, and Georg Stary
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Dermatology - Abstract
Our study illustrates a predisposition to cancer upon cutaneous β genus human papillomavirus (HPV) infection as part of human polymerase-δ deficiency. In addition, polymerase-δ deficiency infers susceptibility to the development of large cutaneous warts and progression to squamous cell carcinoma associated with HPV63, which usually causes benign papillomas. Our findings warrant close monitoring for viral skin oncogenesis in individuals with syndromic polymerase-δ deficiency.
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- 2023
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19. Improvement of RG1-VLP vaccine performance in BALB/c mice by substitution of alhydrogel with the next generation polyphosphazene adjuvant PCEP
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Jason D. Marshall, Chelsea Sanders, Breana Myers, Alexander K. Andrianov, Athina Zacharia, Ligia A. Pinto, Sarah M. Valencia, Rebecca L. Matthews, Simone Difilippantonio, Robert H. Shoemaker, Richard B.S. Roden, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Alexander Marin, and Chia Kuei Wu
- Subjects
Polymers ,viruses ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030231 tropical medicine ,Immunology ,Aluminum Hydroxide ,Antibodies, Viral ,complex mixtures ,BALB/c ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,Organophosphorus Compounds ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Immunology and Allergy ,Polyphosphazene ,Papillomavirus Vaccines ,Vaccines, Virus-Like Particle ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Human papillomavirus ,Neutralizing antibody ,Pharmacology ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,biology ,Hpv types ,business.industry ,Papillomavirus Infections ,virus diseases ,Cancer ,Oncogene Proteins, Viral ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,biology.protein ,Capsid Proteins ,business ,Adjuvant ,Research Paper - Abstract
Current human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines provide substantial protection against the most common HPV types responsible for oral and anogenital cancers, but many circulating cancer-causing types remain for which vaccine coverage is lacking. In addition, all current HPV vaccines rely on aluminum salt-based adjuvant formulations that function through unclear mechanisms with few substitutes available. In an effort to expand the toolbox of available adjuvants suitable for HPV vaccines, we compared the immunogenicity of the RG1-VLP (virus-like particle) vaccine in BALB/c mice when formulated with either the aluminum hydroxide adjuvant Alhydrogel or the novel polyphosphazene macromolecular adjuvant poly[di (carboxylatoethylphenoxy) phosphazene] (PCEP). PCEP-formulated RG1-VLPs routinely outperformed VLP/Alhydrogel in several measurements of VLP-specific humoral immunity, including consistent improvements in the magnitude of antibody (Ab) responses to both HPV16-L1 and the L2 RG1 epitope as well as neutralizing titers to HPV16 and cross-neutralization of pseudovirion (PsV) types HPV18 and HPV39. Dose-sparing studies indicated that RG1-VLPs could be reduced in dose by 75% and the presence of PCEP ensured activity comparable to a full VLP dose adjuvanted by Alhydrogel. In addition, levels of HPV16-L1 and -L2-specific Abs were achieved after two vaccinations with PCEP as adjuvant that were equivalent to or greater than levels achieved with three vaccinations with Alhydrogel alone, indicating that the presence of PCEP resulted in accelerated immune responses that could allow for a decreased dose schedule. Given the extensive clinical track record of polyphosphazenes, these data suggest that substitution of alum-based adjuvants with PCEP for the RG1-VLP vaccine could lead to rapid seropositivity requiring fewer boosts, the dose-sparing of commercial VLP-based vaccines, and the establishment of longer-lasting humoral responses to HPV.
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- 2021
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20. Optimization of RG1-VLP vaccine performance in mice with novel TLR4 agonists
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C. Russell Middaugh, Breana Myers, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Athina Zacharia, Akshay Jain, William D. Picking, Robert K. Ernst, Richard B.S. Roden, Nicholas R. Larson, Sarah M. Valencia, Simone Difilippantonio, Ligia A. Pinto, Chelsea Sanders, Jason D. Marshall, Erin Harberts, and Robert H. Shoemaker
- Subjects
viruses ,medicine.medical_treatment ,030231 tropical medicine ,Antibodies, Viral ,complex mixtures ,Article ,Epitope ,Mice ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Pseudovirion ,Antigen ,medicine ,Animals ,Papillomavirus Vaccines ,Vaccines, Virus-Like Particle ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Neutralizing antibody ,Papillomaviridae ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,General Veterinary ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,Immunogenicity ,Papillomavirus Infections ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,virus diseases ,Oncogene Proteins, Viral ,Virology ,Toll-Like Receptor 4 ,Vaccination ,Infectious Diseases ,Humoral immunity ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Capsid Proteins ,Adjuvant - Abstract
Current human papilloma virus (HPV) vaccines provide substantial protection against the most common HPV types responsible for oral and anogenital cancers, but many circulating cancer-causing types remain that lack vaccine coverage. The novel RG1-VLP (virus-like particle) vaccine candidate utilizes the HPV16-L1 subunit as a backbone to display an inserted HPV16-L2 17–36 a.a. “RG1” epitope; the L2 RG1 epitope is conserved across many HPV types and the generation of cross-neutralizing antibodies (Abs) against which has been demonstrated. In an effort to heighten the immunogenicity of the RG1-VLP vaccine, we compared in BALB/c mice adjuvant formulations consisting of novel bacterial enzymatic combinatorial chemistry (BECC)-derived toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) agonists and the aluminum hydroxide adjuvant Alhydrogel. In the presence of BECC molecules, consistent improvements in the magnitude of Ab responses to both HPV16-L1 and the L2 RG1 epitope were observed compared to Alhydrogel alone. Furthermore, neutralizing titers to HPV16 as well as cross-neutralization of pseudovirion (PsV) types HPV18 and HPV39 were augmented in the presence of BECC agonists as well. Levels of L1 and L2-specific Abs were achieved after two vaccinations with BECC/Alhydrogel adjuvant that were equivalent to or greater than levels achieved with 3 vaccinations with Alhydrogel alone, indicating that the presence of BECC molecules resulted in accelerated immune responses that could allow for a decreased dose schedule for VLP-based HPV vaccines. In addition, dose-sparing studies indicated that adjuvantation with BECC/Alhydrogel allowed for a 75% reduction in antigen dose while still retaining equivalent magnitudes of responses to the full VLP dose with Alhydrogel. These data suggest that adjuvant optimization of HPV VLP-based vaccines can lead to rapid immunity requiring fewer boosts, dose-sparing of VLPs expensive to produce, and the establishment of a longer-lasting humoral immunity.
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- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Vaccination with human alphapapillomavirus-derived L2 multimer protects against human betapapillomavirus challenge, including in epidermodysplasia verruciformis model mice
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Pola Olczak, Margaret Wong, Hua-Ling Tsai, Hao Wang, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Andrew J. Griffith, Paul F. Lambert, and Richard Roden
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Skin Neoplasms ,Immune Sera ,Papillomavirus Infections ,Vaccination ,Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ,Receptors, Fc ,Alphapapillomavirus ,Mice ,Virology ,Epidermodysplasia Verruciformis ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,Animals ,Betapapillomavirus ,Humans ,Capsid Proteins ,Female ,Papillomavirus Vaccines ,Rabbits ,Vaccines, Virus-Like Particle - Abstract
Human alphapapillomaviruses (αHPV) infect genital mucosa, and a high-risk subset is a necessary cause of cervical cancer. Licensed L1 virus-like particle (VLP) vaccines offer immunity against the nine most common αHPV associated with cervical cancer and genital warts. However, vaccination with an αHPV L2-based multimer vaccine, α11-88x5, protected mice and rabbits from vaginal and skin challenge with diverse αHPV types. While generally clinically inapparent, human betapapillomaviruses (βHPV) are possibly associated with cutaneous squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC) in epidermodysplasia verruciformis (EV) and immunocompromised patients. Here we show that α11-88x5 vaccination protected wild type and EV model mice against HPV5 challenge. Passive transfer of antiserum conferred protection independently of Fc receptors (FcR) or Gr-1+ phagocytes. Antisera demonstrated robust antibody titers against ten βHPV by L1/L2 VLP ELISA and neutralized and protected against challenge by 3 additional βHPV (HPV49/76/96). Thus, unlike the licensed vaccines, α11-88x5 vaccination elicits broad immunity against αHPV and βHPV.
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- 2022
22. Human Papillomavirus 42 Drives Digital Papillary Adenocarcinoma and Elicits a Germ Cell-like Program Conserved in HPV-Positive Cancers
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Lukas Leiendecker, Tobias Neumann, Pauline S. Jung, Shona M. Cronin, Thomas L. Steinacker, Alexander Schleiffer, Michael Schutzbier, Karl Mechtler, Thibault Kervarrec, Estelle Laurent, Kamel Bachiri, Etienne Coyaud, Rajmohan Murali, Klaus J. Busam, Babak Itzinger-Monshi, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Lorenzo Cerroni, Eduardo Calonje, Arno Rütten, Frank Stubenrauch, Klaus G. Griewank, Thomas Wiesner, and Anna C. Obenauf
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Oncology ,Medizin - Abstract
The skin is exposed to viral pathogens, but whether they contribute to the oncogenesis of skin cancers has not been systematically explored. Here we investigated 19 skin tumor types by analyzing off-target reads from commonly available next-generation sequencing data for viral pathogens. We identified human papillomavirus 42 (HPV42) in 96% (n = 45/47) of digital papillary adenocarcinoma (DPA), an aggressive cancer occurring on the fingers and toes. We show that HPV42, so far considered a nononcogenic, “low-risk” HPV, recapitulates the molecular hallmarks of oncogenic, “high-risk” HPVs. Using machine learning, we find that HPV-driven transformation elicits a germ cell–like transcriptional program conserved throughout all HPV-driven cancers (DPA, cervical carcinoma, and head and neck cancer). We further show that this germ cell–like transcriptional program, even when reduced to the top two genes (CDKN2A and SYCP2), serves as a fingerprint of oncogenic HPVs with implications for early detection, diagnosis, and therapy of all HPV-driven cancers. Significance: We identify HPV42 as a uniform driver of DPA and add a new member to the short list of tumorigenic viruses in humans. We discover that all oncogenic HPVs evoke a germ cell–like transcriptional program with important implications for detecting, diagnosing, and treating all HPV-driven cancers. See related commentary by Starrett et al., p. 17. This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1
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- 2022
23. Papillomavirus-like Particles in Equine Medicine
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Edmund K. Hainisch, Christoph Jindra, Reinhard Kirnbauer, and Sabine Brandt
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Infectious Diseases ,Virology ,Humans ,Animals ,Horses ,Papillomaviridaegenetics ,Capsid ,Capsid Proteinsgenetics - Abstract
Papillomaviruses (PVs) are a family of small DNA tumor viruses that can induce benign lesions or cancer in vertebrates. The observation that animal PV capsid-proteins spontaneously self-assemble to empty, highly immunogenic virus-like particles (VLPs) has led to the establishment of vaccines that efficiently protect humans from specific PV infections and associated diseases. We provide an overview of PV-induced tumors in horses and other equids, discuss possible routes of PV transmission in equid species, and present recent developments aiming at introducing the PV VLP-based vaccine technology into equine medicine.
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- 2023
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24. Type-specific L1 virus-like particle-mediated protection of horses from experimental bovine papillomavirus 1-induced pseudo-sarcoid formation is long-lasting
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Reinhard Kirnbauer, Julia Harnacker, Edmund K. Hainisch, Saeed Shafti-Keramat, and Sabine Brandt
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0301 basic medicine ,Long lasting ,Skin Neoplasms ,Sarcoidosis ,040301 veterinary sciences ,viruses ,Antibodies, Viral ,0403 veterinary science ,03 medical and health sciences ,Virus-like particle ,Virology ,Animals ,Horses ,Vaccines, Virus-Like Particle ,Bovine papillomavirus 1 ,Bovine papillomavirus ,biology ,Inoculation ,Bovine Papillomavirus-1 ,Papillomavirus Infections ,Horse ,Neoplasms, Experimental ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,biology.organism_classification ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,Disease Models, Animal ,030104 developmental biology ,Immunization ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Capsid Proteins ,Antibody - Abstract
Equine sarcoids are common therapy-resistant skin tumours induced by bovine papillomavirus type 1 or 2 (BPV1, BPV2) infection. We have previously shown that prophylactic vaccination with BPV1 L1 virus-like particles (VLPs) efficiently protects horses from experimental BPV1-induced pseudo-sarcoid development. Here, we assessed BPV1 L1 VLP vaccine-mediated long-term protection from experimental tumour formation in seven horses 5 years after immunization with three different doses of BPV1 L1 VLPs, and three unvaccinated control animals. Horses were challenged by intradermal inoculation with infectious BPV1 virions at 10 sites on the neck (106 virions per injection). In vaccinated horses, BPV1 challenge did not result in any apparent lesions irrespective of vaccine dosage and BPV1-neutralizing antibody titres that had dropped considerably over time and below the detection limit in one individual. Control horses developed pseudo-sarcoids at all inoculation sites. We conclude that immunization of horses with BPV1 L1 VLPs induces long-lasting protection against experimental BPV1 virion-induced disease.
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- 2017
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25. Incorporation of RG1 epitope into HPV16L1-VLP does not compromise L1-specific immunity
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Michael Skoll, Richard B.S. Roden, Saeed Shafti-Keramat, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Bettina Huber, and Christina Schellenbacher
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viruses ,030231 tropical medicine ,Antibodies, Viral ,complex mixtures ,Epitope ,Neutralization ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Epitopes ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine ,Animals ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Papillomavirus Vaccines ,Vaccines, Virus-Like Particle ,Immunization Schedule ,Vaccines, Synthetic ,General Veterinary ,General Immunology and Microbiology ,biology ,business.industry ,Gardasil ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,virus diseases ,Oncogene Proteins, Viral ,Virology ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,Recombinant Proteins ,Vaccination ,Titer ,Infectious Diseases ,Treatment Outcome ,Immunization ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Capsid Proteins ,Cervarix ,Rabbits ,Antibody ,business ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The candidate pan-Human Papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine RG1-VLP are HPV16 major capsid protein L1 virus-like-particles (VLP) comprising a type-common epitope of HPV16 minor capsid protein L2 (RG1; aa17-36). Vaccinations have previously demonstrated efficacy against genital high-risk (hr), low-risk (lr) and cutaneous HPV. To compare RG1-VLP to licensed vaccines, rabbits (n = 3) were immunized thrice with 1 µg, 5 µg, 25 µg, or 125 µg of RG1-VLP or a 1/4 dose of Cervarix®. 5 µg of RG1-VLP or 16L1-VLP (Cervarix) induced comparable HPV16 capsid-reactive and neutralizing antibodies titers (62,500/12,500–62,500 or 1000/10,000). 25 µg RG1-VLP induced robust cross-neutralization titers (50–1000) against hrHPV18/31/33/45/52/58/26/70. To mimic reduced immunization schedules in adolescents, mice (n = 10) were immunized twice with RG1-VLP (5 µg) plus 18L1-VLP (5 µg). HPV16 neutralization (titers of 10,000) similar to Cervarix and Gardasil and cross-protection against hrHPV58 vaginal challenge was observed. RG1-VLP vaccination induces hrHPV16 neutralization comparable to similar doses of licensed vaccines, plus cross-neutralization to heterologous hrHPV even when combined with HPV18L1-VLP.
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- 2019
26. High-risk Mucosal Human Papillomavirus Infection in Squamous Cell Carcinoma and Bowen's Disease of the Hand
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Katharina Strasser, Lucie Harpain, Peter Birner, Sonja Dorfer, Hubert Pehamberger, Stefanie Kancz, Florian Thalhammer, Peter Petzelbauer, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Alessandra Handisurya, and Sonja Radakovic
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squamous cell carcinoma ,p53 ,Skin Neoplasms ,Genotype ,Biopsy ,p16 ,Bowen's Disease ,Dermatology ,Human Papillomavirus DNA Tests ,Bowen´s disease ,medicine ,Biomarkers, Tumor ,Humans ,Basal cell ,Epidermal growth factor receptor ,Human papillomavirus ,Papillomaviridae ,Bowen's disease ,biology ,p21 ,business.industry ,Papillomavirus Infections ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,Hand ,Immunohistochemistry ,RL1-803 ,DNA, Viral ,Cancer research ,biology.protein ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,business ,human papillomaviruses ,epidermal growth factor receptor - Published
- 2019
27. Next generation polyphosphazene immunoadjuvant: Synthesis, self-assembly and in vivo potency with human papillomavirus VLPs-based vaccine
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Alexander K. Andrianov, Jason D. Marshall, Athina Zacharia, Ananda Chowdhury, Robert H. Shoemaker, Ligia A. Pinto, Richard B.S. Roden, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Sarah M. Valencia, and Alexander Marin
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Polymers ,Drug Compounding ,viruses ,Biomedical Engineering ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Biocompatible Materials ,Bioengineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Antibodies, Viral ,complex mixtures ,Immunoadjuvant ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,Organophosphorus Compounds ,Immune system ,Adjuvants, Immunologic ,Antigen ,In vivo ,Animals ,Humans ,Potency ,General Materials Science ,Polyphosphazene ,Papillomavirus Vaccines ,Vaccines, Virus-Like Particle ,030304 developmental biology ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,Chemistry ,Papillomavirus Infections ,Vaccination ,virus diseases ,Hydrogels ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,In vitro ,Drug Liberation ,Biochemistry ,biology.protein ,Molecular Medicine ,Female ,Antibody ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Poly[di(carboxylatomethylphenoxy)phosphazene] (PCMP), a new member of polyphosphazene immunoadjuvant family, is synthesized. In vitro assessment of a new macromolecule revealed hydrolytic degradation profile and immunostimulatory activity comparable to its clinical stage homologue PCPP; however, PCMP was characterized by a beneficial reduced sensitivity to the ionic environment. In vivo evaluation of PCMP potency was conducted with human papillomavirus (HPV) virus-like particles (VLPs) based RG1-VLPs vaccine. In contrast with previously reported self-assembly of polyphosphazene adjuvants with proteins, which typically results in the formation of complexes with multimeric display of antigens, PCMP surface modified VLPs in a composition dependent pattern, which at a high polymer-to VLPs ratio led to stabilization of antigenic particles. Immunization experiments in mice demonstrated that PCMP adjuvanted RG1-VLPs vaccine induced potent humoral immune responses, in particular, on the level of highly desirable protective cross-neutralizing antibodies, and outperformed PCPP and Alhydrogel adjuvanted formulations.
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- 2021
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28. Human papillomavirus vaccination induces neutralising antibodies in oral mucosal fluids
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Andrea Haitel, T Senger, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Alessandra Handisurya, and Christina Schellenbacher
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Adult ,0301 basic medicine ,Cancer Research ,Saliva ,Adolescent ,Antibodies, Viral ,Immunoglobulin G ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Papillomavirus Vaccines ,0302 clinical medicine ,Humans ,Medicine ,Papillomaviridae ,human papillomavirus ,neutralising antibodies ,oropharyngeal disease ,HPV vaccination ,biology ,business.industry ,Papillomavirus Infections ,Mouth Mucosa ,HPV infection ,pseudovirion neutralisation assay ,virus diseases ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,oral fluids ,Virology ,Human papillomavirus vaccination ,In vitro ,030104 developmental biology ,Oncology ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Female ,Antibody ,Translational Therapeutics ,business - Abstract
Background: Mucosal human papillomaviruses (HPV) are a major cause of cancers and papillomas of the anogenital and oropharyngeal tract. HPV-vaccination elicits neutralising antibodies in sera and cervicovaginal secretions and protects uninfected individuals from persistent anogenital infection and associated diseases caused by the vaccine-targeted HPV types. Whether immunisation can prevent oropharyngeal infection and diseases and whether neutralising antibodies represent the correlate of protection, is still unclear. Methods: We determined IgG and neutralising antibodies against low-risk HPV6 and high-risk HPV16/18 in sera and oral fluids from healthy females (n=20) before and after quadrivalent HPV-vaccination and compared the results with non-vaccinated controls. Results: HPV-vaccination induced type-specific antibodies in sera and oral fluids of the vaccinees. Importantly, the antibodies in oral fluids were capable of neutralising HPV pseudovirions in vitro, indicating protection from infection. The increased neutralising antibody levels against HPV16/18 in sera and oral fluids post-vaccination correlated significantly within an individual. Conclusions: We provide experimental proof that HPV-vaccination elicits neutralising antibodies to the vaccine-targeted types in oral fluids. Hence, immunisation may confer direct protection against type-specific HPV infection and associated diseases of the oropharyngeal tract. Measurement of antibodies in oral fluids represents a suitable tool to assess vaccine-induced protection within the mucosal milieu of the orophayrynx.
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- 2016
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29. Preparation and properties of a papillomavirus infectious intermediate and its utility for neutralization studies
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Joshua W. Wang, Richard B.S. Roden, Kihyuck Kwak, Shiwen Peng, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Subhashini Jagu, and Chenguang Wang
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Gamma secretase ,viruses ,Minor capsid protein ,Alphapapillomavirus ,Cross Reactions ,Carrageenan ,Antibodies, Viral ,Article ,Epitope ,Neutralization ,Neutralization Tests ,In vivo ,Virology ,Infectious intermediate ,Animals ,Humans ,Papillomavirus Vaccines ,Furin ,Human papillomavirus (HPV) ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,biology ,Heparin ,Papillomavirus Infections ,L2 ,Papillomavirus ,Antibodies, Neutralizing ,Molecular biology ,In vitro ,Vaccination ,Capsid ,biology.protein ,Capsid Proteins ,Antibody - Abstract
We show that minor capsid protein L2 is full length in clinical virion isolates and prepare furin-cleaved pseudovirus (fcPsV) as a model of the infectious intermediate for multiple human papillomavirus (HPV) types. These fcPsV do not require furin for in vitro infection, and are fully infectious in vivo. Both the γ-secretase inhibitor XXI and carrageenan block fcPsV infection in vitro and in vivo implying that they act after furin-cleavage of L2. Despite their enhanced exposure of L2 epitopes, vaccination with fcPsV particles fails to induce L2 antibody, although L1-specific responses are similar to PsV with intact L2. FcPsV can be applied in a simple, high-throughput neutralization assay that detects L2-specific neutralizing antibodies with >10-fold enhanced sensitivity compared with the PsV-based assay. The PsV and fcPsV-based assays exhibit similar sensitivity for type-specific antibodies elicited by L1 virus-like particles (VLP), but the latter improves detection of L1-specific cross-type neutralizing antibodies.
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- 2014
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30. Abstract LB-200: A cGMP-grade chimeric papillomavirus candidate vaccine (HPV16 RG1-VLP) confers long term cross-protection compared to a nonavalent hpv vaccine in a pre-clinical papillomavirus animal model
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Jonathan M. White, Neil D. Christensen, Shizuko Sei, Brian P. Howard, Jiafen Hu, Michelle L. Kennedy, Christina Schellenbacher, Richard B.S. Roden, Joshua Weiyuan Wang, George W. Buchman, Robert H. Shoemaker, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Sarah A. Brendle, Pola Olczak, Ken Matsui, Huimin Tan, Karla K. Balogh, and Elizabeth R. Glaze
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Oncology ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Animal model ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Cancer ,business ,medicine.disease - Abstract
Background: The National Cancer Institute (NCI) PREVENT Cancer Program (PREVENT) is a peer-reviewed R&D pipeline with the core emphasis on preclinical development and clinical translation of novel cancer preventive interventions. One of the latest PREVENT-supported projects include cGMP production and IND enabling studies of a broad spectrum experimental human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine- HPV16 RG1-VLP. This monovalent chimeric virus-like particle (VLP) displays 360 copies of the highly conserved epitope RG1 (aa 17-36 of minor capsid protein HPV16 L2) in the DE loop of HPV16L1 VLP backbone, and is capable of eliciting broadly neutralizing antibodies that target several clinically relevant HPV genotypes. RG-1 induced cross-neutralizing titers are typically lower than anti-L1 antibodies generated by currently licensed HPV vaccines. Hence, durability of protection has been cited as a cause of concern. Here, using engineering-run cGMP grade HPV16-RG1VLPs formulated with alhdyrogel®, the durability of protection 6 month post-vaccination of HPV16 RG1-VLPs against Gardasil-9®, a licensed HPV vaccine was evaluated using an established papillomavirus disease model. Methods: New Zealand white rabbits (n=15 per treatment group) were administered three intra-muscular vaccinations of HPV16-RG1 (80 µg), human doses of Gardasil-9®, or no vaccine (adjuvant only). Following vaccination, in vivo protection was assessed against 8 high-risk oncogenic HPVs utilizing methods from an established cottontail rabbit papillomavirus (CRPV) disease model. Within each treatment group, 5 rabbits were challenged two weeks post-final vaccination (at peak serum ELISA titer), while another 5 were challenged six months post-final vaccination to assess durability of protection. The remainder 5 rabbits will be challenged one year post final vaccination. Results: During the peak-titer period, rabbits vaccinated with monovalent HPV16-RG1VLP were protected from disease development, which was comparable to the protection afforded by Gardasil-9®. Six months after final vaccination, despite lower serum titers, HPV16-RG1VLP immunized rabbits were still protected from disease development with vaccine efficacy comparable to that of Gardasil-9®. And, in some instances, HPV16-RG1VLP vaccine demonstrated a superior cross-protection. Conclusions: Even as a monovalent formulation, HPV16 RG1 VLP vaccination was able to provide comparable protection against a number of high-risk oncogenic HPV types, including types not covered by Gardasil-9®, even after six months post-vaccination. As a monovalent VLP, HPV16 RG1 VLP holds promise as a broad-spectrum preventative vaccine candidate that could potentially provide broader protection at lower production costs. Studies evaluating protection one-year-post vaccination is currently in progress. Citation Format: Jiafen Hu, Karla Balogh, Ken Matsui, Huimin Tan, Pola Olczak, George Buchman, Brian Howard, Jonathan White, Michelle Kennedy, Shizuko Sei, Elizabeth Glaze, Sarah Brendle, Christina Schellenbacher, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Richard Roden, Robert Shoemaker, Neil Christensen, Joshua Weiyuan Wang. A cGMP-grade chimeric papillomavirus candidate vaccine (HPV16 RG1-VLP) confers long term cross-protection compared to a nonavalent hpv vaccine in a pre-clinical papillomavirus animal model [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2019; 2019 Mar 29-Apr 3; Atlanta, GA. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2019;79(13 Suppl):Abstract nr LB-200.
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- 2019
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31. Inoculation of young horses with bovine papillomavirus type 1 virions leads to early infection of PBMCs prior to pseudo-sarcoid formation
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Edmund K. Hainisch, Barbara Pratscher, Bettina Hartl, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Giuseppe Borzacchiello, Saeed Shafti-Keramat, C. Kainzbauer, Sabine Brandt, Reinhard Tober, Annunziata Corteggio, H. a. r. t. l., B., Hainisch, Ek, Shafti keramat, S, Kirnbauer, R, Corteggio, Annunziata, Borzacchiello, Giuseppe, Tober, R, Kainzbauer, C, Pratscher, B, and Brandt, S.
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Sarcoidosis ,viruses ,Antibodies, Viral ,Immunofluorescence ,Peripheral blood mononuclear cell ,Article ,Neutralization ,Neutralization Tests ,Virology ,medicine ,Animals ,Horses ,RNA, Messenger ,Bovine papillomavirus 1 ,Skin ,Bovine papillomavirus ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Epidermis (botany) ,Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Oncogene Proteins, Viral ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,biology.organism_classification ,Vaccination ,Disease Models, Animal ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique, Direct ,DNA, Viral ,Leukocytes, Mononuclear ,Nucleic acid ,biology.protein ,Antibody - Abstract
Bovine papillomavirus types 1 and 2 (BPV-1 and BPV-2) are known to induce common equine skin tumours, termed sarcoids. Recently, it was demonstrated that vaccination with BPV-1 virus-like particles (VLPs) is safe and highly immunogenic in horses. To establish a BPV-1 challenge model for evaluation of the protective potential of BPV-1 VLPs, four foals were injected intradermally with infectious BPV-1 virions and with viral genome-based and control inocula, and monitored daily for tumour development. Blood was taken before inoculation and at weekly intervals. BPV-1-specific serum antibodies were detected by a pseudo-virion neutralization assay. Total nucleic acids extracted from tumours, intact skin and PBMCs were tested for the presence of BPV-1 DNA and mRNA using PCR and RT-PCR, respectively. Intralesional E5 oncoprotein expression was determined by immunofluorescence. Pseudo-sarcoids developed exclusively at sites inoculated with virions. Tumours became palpable 11–32 days after virion challenge, reached a size of ≤20 mm in diameter and then resolved in ≤6 months. No neutralizing anti-BPV-1 serum antibodies were detectable pre- or post-challenge. BPV-1 DNA was present in lesions but not in intact skin. In PBMCs, viral DNA was already detectable before lesions were first palpable, in concentrations correlating directly with tumour growth kinetics. PBMCs from two of two foals also harboured E5 mRNA. Immunofluorescence revealed the presence of the E5 protein in tumour fibroblasts, but not in the apparently normal epidermis overlying the lesions. Together with previous findings obtained in horses and cows, these data suggest that papillomavirus infection may include a viraemic phase.
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- 2011
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32. Safety and immunogenicity of BPV-1 L1 virus-like particles in a dose-escalation vaccination trial in horses
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R. van den Hoven, Edmund K. Hainisch, Saeed Shafti-Keramat, Sabine Brandt, and Reinhard Kirnbauer
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biology ,business.industry ,viruses ,Immunogenicity ,medicine.medical_treatment ,General Medicine ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Virology ,Neutralization ,Virus ,Vaccination ,Titer ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,medicine ,Antibody ,business ,Adjuvant ,Plaque-forming unit - Abstract
Summary Reasons for performing study: Infection with bovine papillomaviruses types 1 and 2 (BPV-1, BPV-2) can lead to the development of therapy-resistant skin tumours termed sarcoids and possibly other skin diseases in equids. Although sarcoids seriously compromise the welfare of affected animals and cause considerable economic losses, no prophylactic vaccine is available to prevent this common disease. In several animal species and man, immunisation with papillomavirus-like particles (VLP) has been shown to protect efficiently from papillomaviral infection. Hypothesis: BPV-1 L1 VLPs may constitute a safe and highly immunogenic vaccine candidate for protection of horses against BPV-1/-2-induced disease. Methods: Three groups of 4 horses each received 50, 100 or 150 mg of BPV-1 L1 VLPs, respectively, on Days 0, 28 and 168. Three control horses received adjuvant only. Horses were monitored on a daily basis for one week after each immunisation and then in 2 week intervals. Sera were collected immediately before, 2 weeks after each vaccination and one and 2 years after the final boost and analysed by pseudovirion neutralisation assay. Results: None of the horses showed adverse reactions upon vaccination apart from mild and transient swelling in 2 individuals. Irrespective of the VLP dose, all VLP-immunised horses had developed a BPV-1-neutralising antibody titre of 1600 plaque forming units (pfu)/ml 2 weeks after the third vaccination. Eight of 10 trial horses still available for follow-up had neutralising antibody titres 1600 pfu/ml one year and 800 pfu/ml 2 years after the last immunisation. Conclusion: Intramuscular BPV-1 L1 VLP vaccination in horses is safe and results in a long-lasting antibody response against BPV-1. Neutralisation titres were induced at levels that correlate with protection in experimental animals and man. Potential relevance: BPV-1 L1 VLPs constitute a promising vaccine candidate for prevention of BPV-1/-2-induced disease in equids.
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- 2011
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33. Chimeric L1-L2 Virus-Like Particles as Potential Broad-Spectrum Human Papillomavirus Vaccines
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Christina Schellenbacher, Reinhard Kirnbauer, and Richard B.S. Roden
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Risk ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,viruses ,Immunology ,Microbiology ,Neutralization ,Epitope ,Epitopes ,Mice ,Capsid ,Pseudovirion ,Microscopy, Electron, Transmission ,Virus-like particle ,Virology ,Vaccines and Antiviral Agents ,Animals ,Papillomavirus Vaccines ,Bovine papillomavirus ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,biology ,Immunogenicity ,virus diseases ,Oncogene Proteins, Viral ,biology.organism_classification ,Fusion protein ,Molecular biology ,Protein Structure, Tertiary ,Insect Science ,Capsid Proteins ,Rabbits ,Peptides ,Baculoviridae - Abstract
The amino (N) terminus of the human papillomavirus (HPV) minor capsid protein L2 can induce low-titer, cross-neutralizing antibodies. The aim of this study was to improve immunogenicity of L2 peptides by surface display on highly ordered, self-assembled virus-like particles (VLP) of major capsid protein L1, and to more completely characterize neutralization epitopes of L2. Overlapping peptides comprising amino acids (aa) 2 to 22 (hereafter, chimera or peptide 2-22), 13 to 107, 18 to 31, 17 to 36, 35 to 75, 75 to 112, 115 to 154, 149 to 175, and 172 to 200 of HPV type 16 (HPV16) L2 were genetically engineered into the DE surface loop of bovine papillomavirus type 1 L1 VLP. Except for chimeras 35-75 and 13-107, recombinant fusion proteins assembled into VLP. Vaccination of rabbits with Freund's adjuvanted native VLP induced higher L2-specific antibody titers than vaccination with corresponding sodium dodecyl sulfate-denatured proteins. Immune sera to epitopes within residues 13 to 154 neutralized HPV16 in pseudovirion neutralization assays, whereas chimera 17-36 induced additional cross-neutralization to divergent high-risk HPV18, -31, -45, -52, and -58; low-risk HPV11; and beta-type HPV5 (titers of 50 to 10,000). Aluminum hydroxide-monophosphoryl lipid A (Alum-MPL)-adjuvanted VLP induced similar patterns of neutralization in both rabbits and mice, albeit with 100-fold-lower titers than Freund's adjuvant. Importantly, Alum-MPL-adjuvanted immunization with chimeric HPV16L1-HPV16L2 (peptide 17-36) VLP induced neutralization or cross-neutralization of HPV16, -18, -31, -45, -52, and -58; HPV6 and -11; and HPV5 (titers of 50 to 100,000). Immunization with HPV16 L1-HPV16 L2 (chimera 17-36) VLP in adjuvant applicable for human use induces broad-spectrum neutralizing antibodies against HPV types evolutionarily divergent to HPV16 and thus may protect against infection with mucosal high-risk, low-risk, and beta HPV types and associated disease.
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- 2009
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34. Population dynamics of serologically identified coinfections with human papillomavirus types 11, 16, 18 and 31 in fertile‐aged Finnish women
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H. M. Surcel, Pentti Koskela, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Matti Lehtinen, Marjo Kaasila, and Eero Pukkala
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Adult ,Cancer Research ,viruses ,Population ,Prevalence ,Biology ,Antibodies, Viral ,medicine.disease_cause ,Serology ,symbols.namesake ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Humans ,Papillomavirus Vaccines ,Poisson regression ,education ,Finland ,Human papillomavirus 16 ,education.field_of_study ,Human papillomavirus 18 ,Human papillomavirus 11 ,Papillomavirus Infections ,virus diseases ,medicine.disease ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Vaccination ,Oncology ,Superinfection ,Immunology ,Cohort ,symbols ,Coinfection ,Female ,Demography - Abstract
Licensed human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccines are expected to prevent high-risk (hr) HPV-infections (most notably types 16 and 18). Whether HPV vaccination will change the distribution of hrHPVs at the population level is open, since competition between HPV types is not well understood. Two stratified random subcohorts (1983–1997 and 1995–2003) of 7,815 and 3,252 women with a minimum of 2 pregnancies (
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- 2009
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35. Diseases caused by human papillomaviruses (HPV)
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Christina Schellenbacher, Alessandra Handisurya, and Reinhard Kirnbauer
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Cervical cancer ,business.industry ,Papillomavirus Infections ,virus diseases ,Dermatology ,HPV vaccines ,Epidermodysplasia verruciformis ,medicine.disease ,Virology ,female genital diseases and pregnancy complications ,Genital warts ,Vaccination ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Skin Diseases, Viral ,medicine ,Humans ,Skin cancer ,business ,Cervix ,Oncovirus - Abstract
Human papillomaviruses (HPV) are non-enveloped tumor viruses with a double stranded DNA approximately 8 kilobases in length. The viral genome is enclosed by a spherical capsid with icosahedral symmetry and a diameter of about 55 nm. More than 100 HPV types have been identified. They infect the squamous epithelia of skin and mucosa and usually cause benign papillomas or warts. Persistent infection with high-risk oncogenic HPV causes all cervical cancers, most anal cancers, and a subset of vulvar, vaginal, penile and oropharyngeal cancers. In recent years cutaneous beta-HPV types have been associated with the pathogenesis of non-melanoma skin cancers. Two prophylactic HPV vaccines based on virus-like particles (VLP) are licensed. These are up to 100% effective in preventing HPV 16 and HPV 18 infections and associated genital lesions in women, who have not been previously infected with these types. One vaccine also prevents genital warts caused by HPV 6 and HPV 11.
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- 2009
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36. Expression Pattern and Subcellular Localization of Human Papillomavirus Minor Capsid Protein L2
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Patti E. Gravitt, Brigitte M. Ronnett, Subhashini Jagu, Richard B.S. Roden, Zhenhua Lin, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Ratish Gambhira, Anna Yemelyanova, and Craig Meyers
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Male ,Adenosquamous carcinoma ,viruses ,Blotting, Western ,Foreskin ,Fluorescent Antibody Technique ,Uterine Cervical Neoplasms ,Promyelocytic Leukemia Protein ,Biology ,Cervical intraepithelial neoplasia ,Pathology and Forensic Medicine ,Promyelocytic leukemia protein ,Organ Culture Techniques ,Death-associated protein 6 ,Antigen ,medicine ,Humans ,Adaptor Proteins, Signal Transducing ,Tumor Suppressor Proteins ,Papillomavirus Infections ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Nuclear Proteins ,virus diseases ,Oncogene Proteins, Viral ,medicine.disease ,Immunohistochemistry ,Molecular biology ,Staining ,Protein Transport ,biology.protein ,Adenocarcinoma ,Capsid Proteins ,Female ,Co-Repressor Proteins ,HeLa Cells ,Molecular Chaperones ,Transcription Factors ,Regular Articles - Abstract
The expression pattern of human papillomavirus (HPV) capsid antigen L2 is poorly described, and the significance of its localization with both promyelocytic leukemia protein (PML) and Daxx in a subnuclear domain, nuclear domain 10 (ND-10), when ectopically expressed in tissue culture cells is controversial. To address whether ND-10 localization of L2 occurs in natural cervical lesions, we used a HPV16 and HPV18 L2-specific monoclonal antibody (RG-1), in addition to rabbit antiserum to HPV6 L2, to localize L2. Immunohistochemical staining with RG-1 produced diffuse staining in the nuclei of some cells located within the superficial epithelial layers in eight of nine cases of HPV16/18(+) cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 1 (CIN1); however, no staining was observed in HPV16/18(+) high-grade CIN (0 of 8 cases), normal cervical epithelium (0 of 20 cases), cervical squamous cell carcinoma (0 of 102 cases), adenocarcinoma (0 of 51 cases), or adenosquamous carcinoma (0 of 6 cases). HPV16/18(+) cervical lesions that express L2 exhibit higher HPV16/18 genome copies per cell compared with those that do not positively stain with RG-1 (P = 0.04). RG-1 staining of HeLa cells transfected with L2 expression constructs was frequently concentrated in the ND-10, particularly in cells expressing high levels of L2, and co-localized with the cellular markers of ND-10, PML, and Daxx. In contrast, L2 was primarily diffuse within the nucleus and distinct from ND-10 as defined by PML immunofluorescent staining in CIN lesions, condylomata, and HPV16-transduced organotypic cultures.
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- 2009
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37. Anale HPV-Infektionen
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Johann Pfeifer, M. Klimpfinger, Andreas Widschwendter, Bettina Zelger, Friedrich Conrad, S. Roka, Reinhard Höpfl, Felix Aigner, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Hugo Bonatti, Andreas Salat, Kurt Heim, Robert Zangerle, Andrea Maier, Yves Marcus Rigler, and Alfred Haidenberger
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Vaccination ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) ,General Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease_cause - Published
- 2008
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38. Interleukin-6 Is Produced by Epidermal Cells and Plays an Important Role in the Activation of Human T-Lymphocytes and Natural Killer Cells
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Thomas Schwarz, Peter Neuner, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Agatha Urbanski, Jean Krutmann, Thomas A. Luger, A Köck, Wolfgang Borth, and E. Schauer
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Lymphokine-activated killer cell ,biology ,Interleukin-6 ,Chemistry ,Interleukins ,Macrophages ,T-Lymphocytes ,General Neuroscience ,ZAP70 ,Lymphocyte Activation ,Natural killer T cell ,KB Cells ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Killer Cells, Natural ,Interleukin 21 ,History and Philosophy of Science ,biology.protein ,Cancer research ,Lymphocyte activation ,Interleukin 12 ,Humans ,Keratins ,Epidermis ,Interleukin 6 ,Skin - Published
- 2008
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39. A subset of equine sarcoids harbours BPV-1 DNA in a complex with L1 major capsid protein
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Ralf Steinborn, R. Haralambus, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Christian Stanek, Saeed Shafti-Keramat, and Sabine Brandt
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Permissiveness ,Bovine papillomavirus ,Skin Neoplasms ,Sarcoidosis ,Biopsy ,viruses ,Antibodies, Viral ,Polymerase Chain Reaction ,Genome ,Virions ,Pathogenesis ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Virology ,Animals ,Immunocapture PCR ,Horses ,Bovine papillomavirus 1 ,Skin ,Equine sarcoids ,Equine sarcoid ,biology ,Papillomavirus Infections ,Virion ,biology.organism_classification ,Molecular biology ,Capsid ,chemistry ,DNA, Viral ,biology.protein ,Capsid Proteins ,Horse Diseases ,Antibody ,DNA - Abstract
Bovine papillomavirus type 1 or 2 (BPV-1, BPV-2) are accepted causal factors in equine sarcoid pathogenesis. Whereas viral genomes are consistently found and expressed within lesions, intact virions have never been detected, thus permissiveness of sarcoids for BPV-1 replication remains unclear. To reassess this issue, an immunocapture PCR (IC/PCR) was established using L1-specific antibodies to capture L1-DNA complexes followed by amplification of the viral genome. Following validation of the assay, 13 sarcoid-bearing horses were evaluated by IC/PCR. Samples were derived from 21 tumours, 4 perilesional/intact skin biopsies, and 1 serum. Tissue extracts from sarcoid-free equines served as controls. IC/PCR scored positive in 14/24 (58.3%) specimens obtained from sarcoid-patients, but negative for controls. Quantitative IC/PCR demonstrated
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- 2008
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40. New Chlamydia trachomatis L2 Strains Identified in a Recent Outbreak of Lymphogranuloma Venereum in Vienna, Austria
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Bernd Gmeinhart, Thomas Meyer, Christine Bangert, Armin Rieger, Christian Jantschitsch, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Norbert Kohrgruber, Alexandra Geusau, Angelika Stary, and Georg Stary
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Adult ,Male ,Microbiology (medical) ,Sexually transmitted disease ,Genotype ,Biovar ,Molecular Sequence Data ,Chlamydia trachomatis ,Dermatology ,urologic and male genital diseases ,medicine.disease_cause ,Disease Outbreaks ,Men who have sex with men ,Microbiology ,medicine ,Humans ,Chlamydiaceae ,Homosexuality, Male ,Base Sequence ,biology ,business.industry ,Lymphogranuloma venereum ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Outbreak ,Sequence Analysis, DNA ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Virology ,Infectious Diseases ,Austria ,Lymphogranuloma Venereum ,Coinfection ,business ,Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins - Abstract
Background: Since 2003, an ongoing outbreak of lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV), caused by Chlamydia trachomatis biovar L2b, has been reported among men who have sex with men. Methods: Twenty-four samples positive for C. trachomatis were analyzed for specific biovars and genovariants by genotyping of the variable segment (VS) 4, VS2 and VS1 regions of the outer membrane protein (omp) A. In addition we assessed the patients’ sociodemographic background and clinical signs and symptoms. Results: Twenty-four men who have sex with men presented with either anorectal or inguinal symptoms and tested positive for C. trachomatis DNA. Of these, the L2 genotype accounted for 15 patients, with a high coinfection rate with HIV (73.3%) and other sexually transmitted infections (53.4%). Analysis of the VS1, VS2, and VS4 regions of the ompA gene revealed the variant L2b in 8 patients. In 4 patients, 3 new L2 sequences were identified with nucleotide changes in the VS1, VS2, and VS4 region, respectively, defining new strains designated L2c, d, e. Conclusions: This outbreak of LGV represents the further spread of C. trachomatis L2 infection. Sequence analysis of ompA regions shows heterogeneity of L2 variants, suggesting more than 1 source of the LGV infections diagnosed in Vienna.
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- 2008
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41. Human papillomavirus type 26 infection causing multiple invasive squamous cell carcinomas of the fingernails in an AIDS patient under highly active antiretroviral therapy
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Armin Rieger, Alessandra Handisurya, A. Koller, Alexander A. Bankier, Georg Stingl, Reinhard Kirnbauer, and Andreas Salat
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Adult ,Male ,Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Skin Neoplasms ,food.ingredient ,medicine.medical_treatment ,AIDS-Related Opportunistic Infections ,Dermatology ,Alphapapillomavirus ,Article ,Virus ,Fingers ,food ,Antiretroviral Therapy, Highly Active ,medicine ,Carcinoma ,Humans ,Neoplasm Invasiveness ,Cervical cancer ,business.industry ,Papillomavirus Infections ,virus diseases ,Immunosuppression ,medicine.disease ,Radiography ,Nails ,Epidermoid carcinoma ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,Disease Progression ,Viral disease ,business - Abstract
Squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) of the nail unit is a rare disorder. An association with high-risk genital human papillomavirus (HPV) infection has been reported. We report a 28-year-old human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected bisexual man who had multiple invasive SCC of the fingers, infected with the rare type HPV 26. Classification of HPV 26 as high- or intermediate-risk type has been uncertain, due to its rare presence in cervical cancer. Despite successful treatment with highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), the patient developed extensive hyperkeratotic nailbed proliferations of all fingers. Tumours were refractory to treatment and invaded into adjacent tissues. X-rays of the hands demonstrated bone invasion, necessitating amputation of distal phalanges of several fingers. Histologically, highly differentiated preinvasive and invasive verrucous SCCs were identified. Molecular DNA typing identified HPV 26 in the SCCs and in some premalignant lesions. By in situ hybridization HPV 26 DNA was detected in numerous tumour cells, indicating productive infection with high-level amplification of the viral genome. In the remaining proliferations, high-risk HPV type 58, cutaneous HPVs and a putative new HPV type were identified. HPV 26 infection appears to be causally involved in the development of SCC of the nail unit in this immunosuppressed patient. Timely evaluation of chronic verrucous nailbed tumours is recommended, especially in immunocompromised patients. Identification of HPV 26, besides known high-risk HPV types, may identify patients at risk for developing SCC of the nailbed and possibly at other locations.
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- 2007
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42. Vaccination with prion peptide-displaying papillomavirus-like particles induces autoantibodies to normal prion protein that interfere with pathologic prion protein production in infected cells
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Dieter Maurer, Dorian Winter, Sabine Gilch, Alessandra Handisurya, Hermann M. Schätzl, Saeed Shafti-Keramat, and Reinhard Kirnbauer
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biology ,animal diseases ,PrPSc Proteins ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,Active immunization ,Biochemistry ,Virology ,Molecular biology ,Epitope ,Immunoglobulin G ,nervous system diseases ,Capsid ,biology.protein ,Antibody ,Molecular Biology ,Peptide sequence ,Bovine papillomavirus - Abstract
Prion diseases are fatal neurodegenerative disorders caused by proteinaceous infectious pathogens termed prions (PrP(Sc)). To date, there is no prophylaxis or therapy available for these transmissible encephalopathies. Passive immunization with monclonal antibodies recognizing the normal host-encoded prion protein (PrP(C)) has been reported to abolish PrP(Sc) infectivity and to delay onset of disease. Because of established immunologic tolerance against the widely expressed PrP(C), active immunization appears to be difficult to achieve. To overcome this limitation, papillomavirus-like particles were generated that display a nine amino acid B-cell epitope, DWEDRYYRE, of the murine/rat prion protein in an immunogenic capsid surface loop, by insertion into the L1 major capsid protein of bovine papillomavirus type 1. The PrP peptide was selected on the basis of its previously suggested central role in prion pathogenesis. Immunization with PrP-virus-like particles induced high-titer antibodies to PrP in rabbit and in rat, without inducing overt adverse effects. As determined by peptide-specific ELISA, rabbit immune sera recognized the inserted murine/rat epitope and also cross-reacted with the homologous rabbit/human epitope differing in one amino acid residue. In contrast, rat immune sera recognized the murine/rat peptide only. Sera of both species reacted with PrP(C) in its native conformation in mouse brain and on rat pheochromocytoma cells, as determined by immunoprecipitation and fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis. Importantly, rabbit anti-PrP serum contained high-affinity antibody that inhibited de novo synthesis of PrP(Sc) in prion-infected cells. If also effective in vivo, PrP-virus-like particle vaccination opens a unique possibility for immunologic prevention of currently fatal and incurable prion-mediated diseases.
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- 2007
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43. Anogenital Human Papillomavirus Prevalence is Unaffected by Therapeutic Tumour Necrosis Factor-alpha Inhibition
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Andrea Haitel, Christian Primas, Reinhard Horvat, Pavol Papay, Adrian Tanew, Harald Vogelsang, Alessandra Handisurya, Stefanie Lázár, and Reinhard Kirnbauer
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Adult ,Male ,Time Factors ,Exacerbation ,Anti-Inflammatory Agents ,Dermatology ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Reproductive Tract Infections ,Risk Assessment ,Serology ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Immunocompromised Host ,Young Adult ,0302 clinical medicine ,Mesalazine ,Risk Factors ,Psoriasis ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Prospective cohort study ,Papillomaviridae ,Aged ,Anus Diseases ,business.industry ,Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha ,Papillomavirus Infections ,HPV infection ,General Medicine ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Inflammatory Bowel Diseases ,chemistry ,Condylomata Acuminata ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Austria ,Immunology ,030211 gastroenterology & hepatology ,Tumor necrosis factor alpha ,Female ,business - Abstract
Patients receiving tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α) inhibitors are at increased risk of exacerbation of (myco-)bacterial and some viral infections. However, information on anogenital human papillomavirus (HPV) infection in these patients is sparse or conflicting. In this study 222 patients with psoriasis or inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), who received either anti-TNF-α inhibitors or alternatives (purine-, folic acid analogues, phototherapy, fumaric ester, mesalazine) continuously for at least 6 months, were evaluated for the presence of anogenital HPV-induced lesions, mucosal HPV DNA, and serological status of mucosal low-risk HPV6 and high-risk HPV16/HPV18. Hallmarks of anogenital HPV infection were more frequently detected in patients with psoriasis than in those with IBD. HPV-induced lesions, viral DNA, and seroprevalence were not elevated in participants with psoriasis or IBD, who received TNF-α inhibitors for a mean duration of 31.4 months (range 6-96 months) compared with recipients of alternative or no treatment. TNF-α blockade for a mean period of 31.4 months does not increase detectable anogenital HPV infection or disease.
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- 2015
44. Cytokines and the Skin
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Thomas A. Luger, Agatha Urbanski, Jean Krutmann, Reinhard Kirnbauer, A Köck, and Thomas Schwarz
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Text mining ,business.industry ,Immunology ,Medicine ,business ,medicine.disease ,Cutaneous lymphoma - Published
- 2015
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45. Prevalence of anal HPV infection in solid-organ transplant patients prior to immunosuppression
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Andreas Salat, Ferdinand Mühlbacher, S. Roka, Julia Roka, Reinhard Kirnbauer, and Susanne Rasoul-Rockenschaub
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Adult ,Male ,Nephrology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Gastroenterology ,Organ transplantation ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,Epidemiology ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Medicine ,Anal cancer ,Aged ,Immunosuppression Therapy ,Transplantation ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Papillomavirus Infections ,HPV infection ,Immunosuppression ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Kidney Transplantation ,Liver Transplantation ,Rectal Diseases ,Relative risk ,Immunology ,Female ,business - Abstract
Patients that undergo organ transplantation have a high risk of developing various malignancies, depending on the duration and magnitude of immunosuppressive therapy. Among others, a 10-fold increased relative risk has been reported for the development of anal cancer. There is a strong association between persistent infection with high-risk mucosal types of human papillomavirus (HPV) and anogenital neoplasia. In this study we analysed the prevalence of anal HPV infection in organ transplant patients before starting immunosuppressive therapy. In a university transplant unit, patients ( n=60, 40 male, 20 female) that were undergoing solid-organ transplantation (kidney, liver) for the first time were routinely screened for anal HPV infection. Anal swabs were obtained within 24 h after transplantation and analysed for the presence of mucosal-type HPV DNA by liquid DNA/RNA hybridization [hybrid capture (HC) 2 test]. Overall, some type of HPV DNA was detected in 14/60 (23.3%) patients; 9/60 (15%) were positive for high-risk HPV and 8/60 (13.4%) were positive for low-risk HPV, and 3/60 (5%) were positive for both types. Prevalence of HPV infection tended to be higher in patients that were receiving liver transplants than in those receiving kidney transplants (29.4% vs. 20.9%), but the difference did not reach statistical significance. In our series of organ transplant patients the prevalence of previous HPV infection (23.3%) before immunosuppressive therapy was started was higher than that found in previous epidemiological studies or in a control group. In particular, there was a high rate (15%) of infection with oncogenic HPV types. These findings have important implications on screening and surveillance policies in this patient group at risk of developing neoplasias, including anal cancer.
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- 2004
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46. High Prevalence of Cutaneous Human Papillomavirus DNA on the Top of Skin Tumors but not in 'Stripped' Biopsies from the Same Tumors
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Eva Hradil, Bo Stenquist, Katharina Slupetzky, Peter Nordin, Bernt Lindelöf, Joakim Dillner, Ola Forslund, and Reinhard Kirnbauer
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Seborrheic keratosis ,tumors ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Pathology ,HPV ,Skin Neoplasms ,Biopsy ,Dermatology ,Biochemistry ,Virus ,Article ,Lesion ,medicine ,Prevalence ,Humans ,Basal cell carcinoma ,Papillomaviridae ,Keratosis, Seborrheic ,Molecular Biology ,Aged ,Aged, 80 and over ,High prevalence ,biology ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Actinic keratosis ,Papillomavirus Infections ,Cell Biology ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,PCR ,superficial ,Carcinoma, Basal Cell ,DNA, Viral ,Carcinoma, Squamous Cell ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,business - Abstract
Genomes of human papillomaviruses (HPV) are common in biopsies from non-melanoma skin cancers but are also found on healthy skin and it is possible that HPV positivity in tumor biopsies by PCR may merely reflect contamination of the lesion surface. To investigate this issue, 229 immunocompetent patients were tested for HPV DNA in swab samples collected on top of skin tumors and in biopsies of the same tumors, obtained after stripping with tape to remove superficial layers. HPV DNA was detected on top of 69% (159 of 229) of the lesions, and in 12% (28 of 229) of the stripped biopsies (p
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- 2004
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47. 230-kDa and 190-kDa proteins in addition to desmoglein 1 as immunological targets in a subset of pemphigus foliaceus with a combined cell-surface and basement membrane zone immune staining pattern
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Y. Liu, Masayuki Amagai, Friederike Pieczkowski, Georg Stingl, M. Kiss, Katharina Slupetzky, Dagmar Foedinger, Franz Karlhofer, Takashi Hashimoto, and Reinhard Kirnbauer
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Pathology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Lupus erythematosus ,integumentary system ,Acantholysis ,Pemphigus erythematosus ,Autoantibody ,Dermatology ,Biology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Pemphigus ,immune system diseases ,Desmoglein 1 ,Immunopathology ,Immunology ,medicine ,skin and connective tissue diseases ,Molecular Biology ,Pemphigus foliaceus - Abstract
Pemphigus erythematosus, initially described as a combination of pemphigus with lupus erythematosus, and pemphigus foliaceus are now frequently considered localized and generalized variants of superficial pemphigus. Yet diagnostic criteria for pemphigus erythematosus remain controversial. Distinct from pemphigus foliaceus, pemphigus erythematosus displays immune depositions at the dermal-epidermal junction, which suggests additional immunopathological mechanisms. We present three patients with clinical and histopathologic signs of superficial pemphigus, who all exhibited an immunomorphology characteristic of pemphigus erythematosus. Complement depositions in a granular-linear fashion were consistently found at the dermal-epidermal junction besides in vivo bound and circulating antikeratinocyte cell-surface autoantibodies. Histopathology showed subcorneal acantholysis, and all sera contained antidesmoglein 1 but not antidesmoglein 3 autoantibodies detected by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA). Additional autoantibodies against a 230-kDa protein and against a 190-kDa protein comigrating with bullous pemphigoid antigen 1 (BP230) and periplakin, respectively, were present in all the patients' sera. As two sera specifically reacted with BP230 by ELISA, the presence of BP230-specific autoantibodies could be associated with dermal-epidermal immune staining in these patients. In pemphigus erythematosus, dermal-epidermal immune staining is generally attributed to the deposition of immune complexes, while the presence of BP230-specific autoantibodies has not been reported in this disease previously. Perhaps, the unique autoantibody profile of the patients in the study permits discrimination between patients with superficial pemphigus that display additional dermal-epidermal immune staining from those with conventional pemphigus foliaceus on a molecular basis. Further studies will be required to substantiate the frequency of this occurrence and to unravel its pathogenic significance.
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- 2003
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48. 579 High-risk human papillomavirus infection in Bowen’s disease and Squamous Cell Carcinomas of the hands
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Peter Birner, Hubert Pehamberger, S. Radakovic, Alessandra Handisurya, S. Haas, Peter Petzelbauer, Reinhard Kirnbauer, L. Harpain, and S. Dorfer
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Bowen's disease ,business.industry ,Cell ,Cell Biology ,Dermatology ,medicine.disease ,Biochemistry ,Koilocyte ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,medicine ,Cancer research ,Human papillomavirus ,business ,Molecular Biology - Published
- 2017
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49. Chimeric papillomavirus-like particles expressing a foreign epitope on capsid surface loops
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Katharina Slupetzky, Petra Lenz, Andreas Grassauer, Reinhard Kirnbauer, Saeed Shafti-Keramat, Sabine Brandt, and Margit Sára
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medicine.drug_class ,Recombinant Fusion Proteins ,viruses ,Context (language use) ,Peptide ,Biology ,Antibodies, Viral ,Monoclonal antibody ,Article ,Neutralization ,Epitope ,Mice ,Capsid ,Neutralization Tests ,Virology ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Papillomaviridae ,Bovine papillomavirus 1 ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Immunodominant Epitopes ,Bovine Papillomavirus-1 ,Immunogenicity ,Papillomavirus Infections ,Virion ,Antibodies, Monoclonal ,Viral Vaccines ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Molecular biology ,Tumor Virus Infections ,chemistry ,Cattle ,Immunization - Abstract
Neutralization capsid epitopes are important determinants for antibody-mediated immune protection against papillomavirus (PV) infection and induced disease. Chimeric L1 major capsid proteins of the human PV type 16 (HPV-16) and the bovine PV type 1 (BPV-1) with a foreign peptide incorporated into several capsid surface loops self-assembled into pentamers or virus-like particles (VLP). Binding patterns of neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (MAb) and immunization of mice confirmed (i) that regions around aa 282–286 and 351–355 contribute to neutralization epitopes and identified the latter region as an immunodominant site and (ii) that placing a foreign peptide in the context of an assembled structure markedly enhanced its immunogenicity. Pentamers disassembled from wild-type HPV-16 and BPV-1 VLPs displayed some of the neutralization epitopes that were detected on fully assembled VLPs, but were deficient for binding a subset of neutralizing MAb that inhibit cell attachment.
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- 2001
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50. Chimeric papillomavirus virus-like particles elicit antitumor immunity against the E7 oncoprotein in an HPV16 tumor model
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John Nieland, Marloes L. H. De Bruijn, Karin E. de Visser, Heather Greenstone, John T. Schiller, Douglas R. Lowy, Reinhard Kirnbauer, W. Martin Kast, and Richard B.S. Roden
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Genes, Viral ,Papillomavirus E7 Proteins ,viruses ,Spodoptera ,Antibodies, Viral ,complex mixtures ,Virus ,Cell Line ,Mice ,Capsid ,Immune system ,Neutralization Tests ,Immunity ,Animals ,Cytotoxic T cell ,Papillomaviridae ,Viral Structural Proteins ,Immunity, Cellular ,Vaccines, Synthetic ,Multidisciplinary ,biology ,Chimera ,Cell Membrane ,virus diseases ,Viral Vaccines ,Neoplasms, Experimental ,Oncogene Proteins, Viral ,Biological Sciences ,biochemical phenomena, metabolism, and nutrition ,Precipitin Tests ,Virology ,Molecular biology ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Perforin ,biology.protein ,Receptors, Virus ,Capsid Proteins ,Antibody ,Baculoviridae - Abstract
Papillomavirus-like particles (VLPs) are a promising prophylactic vaccine candidate to prevent human papillomavirus (HPV) infections and associated epithelial neoplasia. However, they are unlikely to have therapeutic effects because the virion capsid proteins are not detected in the proliferating cells of the infected epithelia or in cervical carcinomas. To increase the number of viral antigen targets for cell-mediated immune responses in a VLP-based vaccine, we have generated stable chimeric VLPs consisting of the L1 major capsid protein plus the entire E7 (11 kDa) or E2 (43 kDa) nonstructural papillomavirus protein fused to the L2 minor capsid protein. The chimeric VLPs are indistinguishable from the parental VLPs in their morphology and in their ability to agglutinate erythrocytes and elicit high titers of neutralizing antibodies. Protection from tumor challenge was tested in C57BL/6 mice by using the tumor cell line TC-1, which expresses HPV16 E7, but not the virion structural proteins. Injection of HPV16 L1/L2-HPV16 E7 chimeric VLPs, but not HPV16 L1/L2 VLPs, protected the mice from tumor challenge, even in the absence of adjuvant. The chimeric VLPs also induced protection against tumor challenge in major histocompatibility class II-deficient mice, but not in β2-microglobulin or perforin knockout mice implying that protection was mediated by class I-restricted cytotoxic lymphocytes. These findings raise the possibility that VLPs may generally be efficient vehicles for generating cell-mediated immune responses and that, specifically, chimeric VLPs containing papillomavirus nonstructural proteins may increase the therapeutic potential of VLP-based prophylactic vaccines in humans.
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- 1998
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