The present disclosure relates to Farmington (FMT) virus and its use in cancer treatment.
Pathogens and disease cells comprise antigens that can be detected and targeted by the immune system, thus providing a basis for immune-based therapies, including immunogenic vaccines and immunotherapies. In the context of cancer treatment, for example, immunotherapy is predicated on the fact that cancer cells often have molecules on their cell surfaces that can be recognized and targeted.
Viruses have also been employed in cancer therapy, in part for their ability to directly kill disease cells. For example, oncolytic viruses (OVs) specifically infect, replicate in and kill malignant cells, leaving normal tissues unaffected. Several OVs have reached advanced stages of clinical evaluation for the treatment of various neoplasms. In addition to the vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV), the non-VSV Maraba virus has shown oncotropism in vitro. Maraba virus, termed “Maraba MG1” or “MG1”, has been engineered to have improved tumour selectivity and reduced virulence in normal cells, relative to wild-type Maraba. MG1 is a double mutant strain containing both G protein (Q242R) and M protein (L123W) mutations. In vivo MG1, has potent anti-tumour activity in xenograft and syngeneic tumour models in mice that is superior to the therapeutic efficacy observed with the attenuated VSV, VSVΔM51 oncolytic viruses that preceded MG1 (WO 2011/070440).
Various strategies have been developed to improve OV-induced anti-tumour immunity. The strategies take advantage of both the inherent oncolytic activity of the virus, and the ability to use the virus as a vehicle to generate immunity to tumour associated antigens. One such strategy, defined as an “oncolytic vaccine”, involves the modification of an oncolytic virus so that it contains nucleic acid sequences that expresses one or more tumour antigen(s) in vivo. It has been demonstrated that VSV can also be used as a cancer vaccine vector. Human Dopachrome Tautomerase (hDCT) is an antigen present on melanoma cancers. When administered in a heterologous prime:boost setting in a murine melanoma model, a VSV expressing hDCT not only induced an increased tumour-specific immunity to DCT but also a concomitant reduction in antiviral adaptive immunity. As a result, an increase of both median and long term survival were seen in the model system.
Farmington virus is a member of the Rhabdoviridae family of single-stranded negative sense RNA viruses and has been previously demonstrated to have oncolytic properties. It was first isolated from a wild bird during an outbreak of epizootic eastern equine encephalitis.
There remains a need for improved oncolytic vaccine vectors and treatment regimens that deliver improved immunogenicity to target cancer antigens while retaining, or even improving the overall oncolytic efficacy of the treatment.
The following disclosure is intended to exemplify, not limit, the scope of the invention.
The goal of the invention is to develop a new, improved oncolytic virus capable of being modified into an oncolytic vaccine, e.g., to both function at a therapeutic oncolytic level while eliciting a therapeutic immune response to a tumour associated antigen in a mammal with a cancer expressing the same tumour associated antigen. The oncolytic virus of the invention is capable of being used as the boost component of a heterologous prime:boost therapy. When administered as, for example, using the methods described here the resulting prime:boost therapy provides improved efficacy to when substituted into or added to one or more previously disclosed prime:boost combination therapies. See, e.g., International Application Nos. WO 2010/105347, WO 2014/127478, and WO 2017/195032, the entire contents of each of which are herein incorporated by reference.
In one aspect, the present disclosure provides a Farmington virus formulated to induce an immune response in a mammal against a tumour associated antigen. In some embodiments, the Farmington virus is capable of expressing an antigenic protein that includes an epitope from the tumour associated antigen. In some embodiments, the Farmington virus is formulated in a composition where the virus is separate from an antigenic protein that includes at least one epitope from the tumour associated antigen.
In another aspect, the present disclosure provides a heterologous combination prime:boost therapy for use in inducing an immune response in a mammal. The prime is formulated to generate an immunity in the mammal to a tumour associated antigen. The boost includes a Farmington virus, and is formulated to induce the immune response in the mammal against the tumour associated antigen. Aside from the immunological responses to the tumour associated antigen, the prime and the boost are immunologically distinct.
In yet another aspect, the present disclosure provides a composition comprising a boost for use in inducing an immune response to a tumour associated antigen in a mammalian subject having a pre-existing immunity to the tumour associated antigen. The boost includes a Farmington virus, and is formulated to induce the immune response in the mammal against the tumour associated antigen. The pre-existing immunity may be generated by a prime from a combination prime:boost treatment. In such an example, the immune response generated by the boost is based on the same tumour associated antigen as the immune response generated by the prime that is used in the prime:boost treatment. Aside from the immunological response, the boost is immunologically distinct from the prime.
In still another aspect, the present disclosure provides a Farmington virus formulated to induce an immune response in a mammal against a tumour associated antigen. The Farmington virus is for use as the boost of a pre-existing immunity to the tumour associated antigen. The pre-existing immunity may be generated by the prime of a combination prime:boost therapy. The prime of the combination prime:boost therapy is formulated to generate an immunity in the mammal to the tumour associated antigen and, aside from the immunological responses to the tumour associated antigen, the boost is immunologically distinct from the prime.
In one aspect, the present disclosure provides a Farmington virus comprising a nucleic acid that is capable of expressing a tumour associated antigen or an epitope thereof. In some embodiments, the genomic backbone of the Farmington virus encodes a protein having at least 90% sequence identity with any one of SEQ ID NOs 3-7. In some embodiments, the genomic backbone of the Farmington virus encodes a protein having at least 95% sequence identity with any one of SEQ ID NOs 3-7.
In some embodiments, the tumour associated antigen (“TAA”) is a foreign antigen. For example, the foreign antigen may comprise may comprise an antigenic portion, portions, or derivatives, or the entire tumour-associated foreign antigen. Exemplary foreign TAA's used in the methods of the invention may be or be derived from a fragment or fragments of known TAA's. Foreign TAA's include E6 protein from Human Papilloma Virus (“HPV”); E7 protein from HPV; E6/E7 fusion protein; human CMV antigen, pp65; murine CMV antigen, m38; and others.
In some embodiments, the tumour associated antigen (“TAA”) is a self antigen. For example, the self antigen may comprise an antigenic portion, portions, or derivatives, or the entire tumour-associated self antigen. Exemplary self TAA's used in the methods of the invention may be or be derived from a fragment or fragments of known TAA's. Self TAA's include human dopachrome tautomerase (hDCT) antigen; melanoma-associated antigen (“MAGEA3”); human Six-Transmembrane Epithelial Antigen of the prostate protein (“huSTEAP”); human Cancer Testis Antigen 1 (“NYESO1”); and others.
In some embodiments, the tumour associated antigen is a neoepitope.
In some embodiments, the Farmington virus induces an immune response against the tumour associated antigen in a mammal to whom the Farmington virus is administered. In some embodiments, the mammal has been previously administered a prime that is immunologically distinct from the Farmington virus.
In some embodiments, the prime is, for example,
(a) a virus comprising a nucleic acid that is capable of expressing the tumour associated antigen or an epitope thereof;
(b) T-cells specific for the tumour associated antigen; or
(c) a peptide of the tumour associated antigen.
In some embodiments, the Farmington virus further encodes a cell death protein.
In one aspect, the present disclosure provides a composition comprising a Farmington virus comprising a nucleic acid that is capable of expressing a tumour associated antigen or an epitope thereof, the composition being formulated to induce an immune response in a mammal against the tumour associated antigen.
In one aspect, the present disclosure provides a composition comprising a Farmington virus and an antigenic protein that includes an epitope from a tumour associated antigen, wherein the Farmington virus is separate from the antigenic protein, the composition being formulated to induce an immune response in a mammal against the tumour associated antigen.
In one aspect, the present disclosure provides a heterologous combination prime:boost therapy for use in inducing an immune response in a mammal, wherein the prime is formulated to generate an immunity in the mammal to a tumour associated antigen, and the boost comprises: a Farmington virus comprising a nucleic acid that is capable of expressing a tumour associated antigen or an epitope thereof and is formulated to induce the immune response in the mammal against the tumour associated antigen.
In one aspect, the present disclosure provides a method of enhancing an immune response in a mammal having a cancer, the method comprising a step of: administering to the mammal a composition comprising a Farmington virus comprising a nucleic acid that is capable of expressing a tumour associated antigen or an epitope thereof,
wherein the mammal has been administered a prime that is directed to the tumour associated antigen or an epitope thereof; and wherein the prime is immunologically distinct from the Farmington virus.
In some embodiments, the mammal has a tumour that expresses the tumour associated antigen.
In some embodiments, the cancer is brain cancer. For example, the brain cancer may be glioblastoma.
In some embodiments, the cancer is colon cancer.
In some embodiments, the Farmington virus is capable of expressing an epitope of the tumour associated antigen.
In some embodiments, the prime is directed to an epitope of the tumour associated antigen.
In some embodiments, the prime is directed to the same epitope of the tumour associated antigen as the epitope encoded by the Farmington virus.
In some embodiments, the prime comprises: (a) a virus comprising a nucleic acid that is capable of expressing the tumour associated antigen or an epitope thereof; (b) T-cells specific for the tumour associated antigen; or (c) a peptide of the tumour associated antigen.
In some embodiments, the prime comprises a virus comprising a nucleic acid that is capable of expressing the tumour associated antigen or an epitope thereof. For example, the prime may comprise a single-stranded RNA virus, such as a positive-strand RNA virus (e.g., lentivirus) or a negative-strand RNA virus. In some embodiments, the prime comprises a double-stranded DNA virus. For example, the double-stranded DNA virus may be an adenovirus (e.g., an Ad5 virus).
In some embodiments, the prime comprises T-cells specific for the tumour associated antigen.
In some embodiments, the prime comprises a peptide of the tumour associated antigen. In some such embodiments, the prime further comprises an adjuvant.
In some embodiments, the mammal is administered the composition at least 9 days after the mammal was administered the prime. In some embodiments, the mammal is administered the composition no more than 14 days after the mammal was administered the prime.
In some embodiments, provided methods further comprise a second step of administering to the mammal a composition comprising a Farmington virus comprising a nucleic acid that is capable of expressing a tumour associated antigen or an epitope thereof. In some embodiments, the second step of administering is performed at least 50, at least 75, at least 100, or at least 120 days after the first step of administering.
In some embodiments, provided methods further comprise a third step of administering to the mammal a composition comprising a Farmington virus comprising a nucleic acid that is capable of expressing a tumour associated antigen or an epitope thereof. In some embodiments, the third step of administering is performed at least 50, at least 75, at least 100, or at least 120 days after the second step of administering.
In some embodiments, at least one step of administering is performed by a systemic route of administration.
In some embodiments, at least one step of administering is performed by a non-systemic route of administration.
In various embodiments, at least one step of administering is performed by injection directly into a tumour of the mammal, intracranially, intravenously, or both intravenously and intracranially.
In some embodiments, the frequency of T cells specific for the tumour associated antigen is increased after the step of administering. In some embodiments, the T cells comprise CD8 T cells.
In some embodiments, the mammal's survival is extended compared to that of a control mammal who is not administered the composition. In some embodiments, the control mammal is administered a prime directed to the tumour associated antigen, wherein the prime is immunologically distinct from the composition.
In some embodiments, the frequency of T cells specific for the Farmington virus increases by no more than 3% after the step of administering. In some embodiments, the frequency of CD8 T cells specific for the Farmington virus increases by no more than 3% after the step of administering.
Other aspects and features of the present disclosure will become apparent to those ordinarily skilled in the art upon review of the following description of specific embodiments in conjunction with the accompanying figures.
Embodiments of the present disclosure will now be described, by way of example only, with reference to the attached Figures.
Graphs show mean and SEM and representative dot plots from each treatment group. All data in
Generally, the present disclosure provides Farmington virus and its use as, or in, an immunostimulatory composition. The Farmington virus may be used as a boost of a pre-existing immunity to a tumour associated antigen. The boost may be a component in a heterologous combination prime:boost treatment, where the prime generates the pre-existing immunity. In heterologous prime:boost treatments, the prime and the boost are immunologically distinct.
In the context of the present disclosure, the expression “immunologically distinct” should be understood to mean that at least two agents or compositions (e.g., the prime and the boost) do not produce antisera that cross react with one another. The use of a prime and a boost that are immunologically distinct permits an effective prime/boost response to the tumour associated antigen that is commonly targeted by the prime and the boost.
In the context of the present disclosure, a “combination prime:boost therapy” should be understood to refer to therapies for which (1) the prime and (2) the boost are to be administered as a prime:boost treatment. A “therapy” should be understood to refer to physical components, while a “treatment” should be understood to refer to the method associated with administration of the therapeutic components. The prime and boost need not be physically provided or packaged together, since the prime is to be administered first and the boost is to be administered only after an immunological response has been generated in the mammal. In some examples, the combination may be provided to a medical institute, such as a hospital or doctor's office, in the form of a package (or plurality of packages) of the prime, and a separate package (or plurality of packages) of the boost. The packages may be provided at different times. In other examples, the combination may be provided to a medical institute, such as a hospital or doctor's office, in the form of a package that includes both the prime and the boost. In yet other examples, the prime may be generated by a medical institute, such as through isolation of T-cells from the mammal for adoptive cell transfer, and the boost may be provided at a different time.
In the context of the present disclosure, the expression “tumour associated antigen,” “self tumour associated antigen,” is meant to refer to any immunogen that is that is associated with tumour cells, and that is either absent from or less abundant in healthy cells or corresponding healthy cells (depending on the application and requirements). For instance, the tumour associated antigen may be unique, in the context of the organism, to the tumour cells. Examples of such antigens include but are not limited to human dopachrome tautomerase (hDCT) antigen; melanoma-associated antigen (“MAGEA3”); human Six-Transmembrane Epithelial Antigen of the prostate protein (“huSTEAP”); human Cancer Testis Antigen 1 (“NYESO1”); and others.
In the context of the present disclosure, the expression “foreign antigen” or “non-self antigen” refers to an antigen that originates outside the body of an organism, e.g., antigens from viruses or microorganisms, foods, cells and substances from other organisms, etc. Examples of such antigens include but are not limited to E6 protein from Human Papilloma Virus (“HPV”); E7 protein from HPV; E6/E7 fusion protein; E6/E7 fusion protein; human CMV antigen, pp65; murine CMV antigen, m38; and others.
In the context of the present disclosure, the term “neo-antigen” refers to newly formed antigens that have not previously been recognized by the immune system and that arise from genetic aberrations within a tumor.
In the context of the present disclosure, the expression “self antigen” refers to an antigen that originates within the body of an organism.
The boost is formulated to generate an immune response in the mammal to a tumour associated antigen. The boost may be, for example: a Farmington virus that expresses an antigenic protein; a composition that includes a Farmington virus and a separate antigenic protein; or a cell infected with a Farmington virus that expresses an antigenic protein.
The full-length genomic sequence for wild type Farmington virus has been determined. The sequence of the complementary DNA (cDNA) polynucleotide produced by Farmington virus is shown in SEQ ID NO: 1 (SEQ ID NO: 1 of WO2012167382). The disclosure of WO2012167382 is incorporated herein by reference. The RNA polynucleotide sequence of Farmington virus is shown in SEQ ID NO: 2 (SEQ ID NO: 2 of WO2012167382). Five putative open reading frames were identified in the genomic sequence. Additional ORFs may be present in the virus that have not yet been identified. The sequences of the corresponding proteins are shown in SEQ ID NOs: 3, 4, 5, 6, and 7 (SEQ ID NOs: 3, 4, 5, 6 and 7 of WO2012167382).
Table 1 provide a description of SEQ ID NOs: 1-7.
The encoding DNA sequences are shown in SEQ ID Nos: 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12 respectively (SEQ ID NOs: 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12, respectively, of WO2015154197). (The disclosures of WO 2012/167382 and WO2 015/154197 are incorporated herein by reference.)
In the context of the present disclosure, the expression “a Farmington virus” should be understood to refer to any virus whose genomic backbone encodes:
A Farmington virus according to the present disclosure that expresses an antigenic protein (e.g., a tumour associated antigen or an epitope thereof) may have the nucleic acid sequence encoding the antigenic protein inserted anywhere in the genomic backbone that does not interfere with the production of the viral gene products. For example: the sequence encoding the antigenic protein may be located between the N and the P genes, between the P and the M genes, or between the G and the L genes.
A Farmington virus according to the present disclosure that expresses an antigenic protein may additionally include a nucleic acid sequence that encodes a protein implicated in cell death (“cell death protein”), or a variant thereof. Examples of cell death proteins include, but are not limited to: Apoptin; Bcl-2-associated death promoter (BAD); BCL2-antagonist/killer 1 (BAK1); BCL2-associated X (BAX); p15 BH3 interacting-domain death agonist, transcript variant 2 (BIDv2); B-cell lymphoma 2 interacting mediator of cell death (BIM); Carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase 2, aspartate transcarbamylase, and dihydroorotase (CAD); caspase 2 (CASP2); caspace 3 (CASP3); caspace 8 (CASP8); CCAAT-enhancer-binding protein homologous protein (CHOP); DNA fragmentation factor subunit alpha (DFFA); Granzyme B; activated c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK); Phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate-induced protein 1 (PMAPI 1, also referred to as NOXA); p53 upregulated modulator of apoptosis beta (PUMA beta); p53 upregulated modulator of apoptosis gamma (PUMA gamma); p53-induced death domain protein (PIDD); recombinant ADAM15 disintegrin domain (RAIDD); ubiquitin conjugated Second Mitochondrial-derived Activator of Caspases (SMAC); autophagy related 12 (ATG12); autophagy related 3 (ATG3); Beclin-1 (BECN1); solute carrier family 25 member 4 (SLC25A4); Receptor-interacting serine/threonine-protein kinase 1 (RIPK1); Receptor-interacting serine/threonine-protein kinase 3 (RIPK3); short form of Phosphoglycerate mutase family member 5 (PGAM5S); mixed lineage kinase domain-like (MLKL); Cathepsin D; Maraba M; and any variant thereof.
Specific examples of such an additional protein are: mixed lineage kinase domain-like (MLKL), caspase 2 (CASP2), p15 BH3 interacting-domain death agonist, transcript variant 2 (BIDv2), and Bcl-2-associated death promoter (BAD).
Farmington viruses that encode cell death proteins, or variants thereof, are discussed in WO2015154197, the disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. Specific examples of the MLKL, CASP2, BIDv2, and BAD proteins have the sequences shown in SEQ ID NOs: 13, 15, 17 and 19, respectively, of WO2015154197.
The prime and the boost may include different antigenic proteins, so long as the antigenic proteins are based on the same tumour associated antigen. This should be understood to mean that the antigenic protein of the prime and the antigenic protein of the boost are design or selected, such that they each comprise sequences eliciting an immune reaction to the same tumour associated antigen. It will be appreciated that the antigenic protein of the prime and the antigenic protein of the boost need not be exactly the same in order to accomplish this. For instance, they may be peptides comprising sequences that partially overlap, with the overlapping segment comprising a sequence corresponding to the tumour associated antigen, or a sequence designed to elicit an immune reaction to the tumour associated antigen, thereby allowing an effective prime and boost to the same antigen to be achieved. However, in some embodiments, the antigenic protein of the prime and the antigenic protein of the boost are the same.
The prime, formulated to generate an immunity in the mammal to a tumour associated antigen, may be any combination of components that potentiates the immune response to the tumour associated antigen. For example, the prime may be, or may include: a virus that expresses an antigenic protein; a mixture of a virus and an antigenic protein; a pharmacological agent and an antigenic protein; an immunological agent and an antigenic protein (e.g., an adjuvant and a peptide); adoptive cell transfer; or any combination thereof. In the context of the present disclosure, the subject may have prior exposure to certain antigens unrelated to the present therapy. Any immune response to such prior exposure is not considered a “prime” for the purpose of the presently disclosed methods and compositions.
In some embodiments, the prime comprises
(a) a virus comprising a nucleic acid that is capable of expressing the tumour associated antigen or an epitope thereof;
(b) T-cells specific for the tumour associated antigen; or
(c) a peptide of the tumour associated antigen.
In some embodiments, the prime comprises an oncolytic virus.
In some embodiments, the prime comprises a virus comprising a nucleic acid that is capable of expressing the tumour associated antigen or an epitope thereof.
In some embodiments, the prime comprises a single-stranded RNA virus.
The single-stranded RNA virus may be a positive-sense single stranded RNA virus (e.g., a lentivirus) or a negative-sense single stranded RNA virus.
In some embodiments, the prime comprises a double-stranded DNA virus.
For example, the virus may be an adenovirus, e.g., an Ad5 virus.
In some embodiments, the prime comprises T-cells specific for the tumour associated antigen. For example, the prime may comprise T-cells of the memory phenotype, e.g., CD8+ memory cells (e.g., CD8+CD127+CD62L+ cells).
In some embodiments, the prime comprises a peptide, e.g., an epitope of a tumour associated antigen. In some such embodiments, the prime further comprises an adjuvant.
More specific examples of primes contemplated by the authors include: an adenovirus that expresses an antigenic protein; a lentivirus that expresses an antigenic protein; Listeria monocytogenes (LM) that expresses an antigenic protein; an oncolytic virus that expresses an antigenic protein; an adenovirus and an antigenic protein where the antigenic protein is not encoded by the adenovirus; an oncolytic virus and an antigenic protein where the antigenic protein is not encoded by the oncolytic virus; a mixture of poly I:C and an antigenic protein; CD8 memory T-cells specific to an antigenic protein; a mixture of poly I:C, anti CD40 antibody, and an antigenic protein; and a nanoparticle adjuvant with an immunostimulatory RNA or DNA, or with an antigenic protein.
The tumour associated antigen may be, for example, an antigen in: Melanoma Antigen, family A,3 (MAGEA3); human Papilloma Virus E6 protein (HPV E6); human Papilloma Virus E7 protein (HPV E7); human Six-Transmembrane Epithelial Antigen of the Prostate protein (huSTEAP); Cancer Testis Antigen 1 (NYESO1); Brachyury protein; Prostatic Acid Phosphatase; Mesothelin; CMV pp65; CMV IE1; EGFRvIII; IL13R alpha2; Her2/neu; CD70; CD133; BCA; FAP; Mesothelin; KRAS; p53; CHI; CSP; FABP7; NLGN4X; PTP; H3F3A K27M; G34R/V; or any combination thereof. In some embodiments, the tumor associated antigen is a foreign antigen. In some embodiments, the tumor associated antigen is a self antigen. In some embodiments, the tumour associated antigen is a neo-antigen that results from a tumour-specific mutation of a wild-type self-protein.
The protein sequence of full length, wild type, human MAGEA3 is shown in SEQ ID NO: 13 (SEQ ID NO: 1 of WO/2014/127478). The protein sequence of a variant of full length, wild type, human MAGEA3 is shown in SEQ ID NO; 14 (SEQ ID NO: 4 of WO/2014/127478). The protein sequences of HPV16 E6, HPV18 E6, HPV16 E7 and HPV18 E7 are shown in SEQ ID NOs: 15-18 (SEQ ID Nos: 9-12 of WO/2017/195032). The protein sequence of a huSTEAP protein is shown in SEQ ID NO: 19 (SEQ ID NO: 13 of WO/2017/195032). The protein sequence of NYESO1 is shown in SEQ ID NO: 20 (SEQ ID NO: 13 of WO/2014/127478). The protein sequence of human Brachyury protein is disclosed in the Uniprot database under identifier 015178-1 (www.uniprot.org/uniprot/015178) (SEQ ID NO: 21). The protein sequence of secreted human prostatic acid phosphatase is disclosed in the Uniprot database under identifier P15309-1 (www.uniprot.org/uniprot/P15309) (SEQ ID NO: 22). The disclosure of which is incorporated herein by reference. Variants of these specific sequences may be used as antigenic proteins for the prime and/or the boost of the present disclosure so long as the variant protein includes at least one tumour associated epitope of the reference protein, and the amino acid sequence of the variant protein is at least 70% identical to the amino acid sequence of the reference protein.
In one aspect, the present disclosure provides a heterologous combination prime:boost therapy for use in inducing an immune response in a mammal. The prime is formulated to generate an immunity in the mammal to a tumour associated antigen. The boost includes a Farmington virus, and is formulated to induce the immune response in the mammal against the tumour associated antigen. Aside from the immune responses to the tumour associated antigen, the prime and the boost are immunologically distinct.
In some embodiments, the prime:boost therapy is formulated to generate immune responses against a plurality of antigens. It should be understood that antigenic proteins, such as MAGEA3, HPV E6, HPV E7, huSTEAP, Cancer Testis Antigen 1; Brachyury; Prostatic Acid Phosphatase; FAP; HER2; and Mesothelin have more than one antigenic epitope. Formulating the prime and the Farmington virus to include or express an antigenic protein having a plurality of antigenic epitopes may result in the mammal generating immune responses against more than one of the antigenic epitopes.
In one specific example, the prime and the Farmington virus are both formulated to induce an immune response against at least one antigen in the E6 and E7 transforming proteins of the HPV16 and HPV18 serotypes. This may be accomplished by having the Farmington virus express a fusion protein that includes HPV16 E6, HPV18 E6, HPV16 E7 and HPV18 E7 protein domains. The four protein domains are linked by proteasomally degradable linkers that result in the separate HPV16 E6, HPV18 E6, HPV16 E7 and HPV18 E7 proteins once the fusion protein is in the proteasome. Exemplary fusion proteins are discussed in WO/2014/127478 and WO/2017/195032, the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference. The prime may be formulated to induce an immune response against an antigenic protein that is different from the antigenic protein expressed by the Farmington virus. For example, the prime may be an oncolytic virus that expresses an HPV E6/E7 fusion protein where the four protein domains are linked in a different order.
In another specific example, the prime and the Farmington virus are both formulated to induce an immune response against at least one antigen in MAGEA3. This may be accomplished by having the Farmington virus express an antigenic protein comprising an amino acid sequence (a) that includes at least one tumour associated epitope selected from the group consisting of: EVDPIGHLY (SEQ ID NO: 23), FLWGPRALV (SEQ ID NO: 24), KVAELVHFL (SEQ ID NO: 25), TFPDLESEF (SEQ ID NO: 26), VAELVHFLL (SEQ ID NO: 27), REPVTKAEML (SEQ ID NO: 28), AELVHFLLL (SEQ ID NO: 29), WQYFFPVIF (SEQ ID NO: 30) EGDCAPEEK (SEQ ID NO: 31), KKLLTQHFVQENYLEY (SEQ ID NO: 32), VIFSKASSSLQL (SEQ ID NO: 33), VFGIELMEVDPIGHL (SEQ ID NO: 34), GDNQIMPKAGLLIIV (SEQ ID NO: 35), TSYVKVLHHMVKISG (SEQ ID NO: 36), and FLLLKYRAREPVTKAE (SEQ ID NO: 37), and (b) that is at least 70% identical to the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 13( ). The prime may be formulated to induce an immune response against an antigenic protein that is different from the antigenic protein expressed by the Farmington virus. For example, the prime may be a mixture of poly I:C and a synthetic long peptide that includes FLWGPRALV (SEQ ID NO: 24).
In yet another specific example, the prime and the Farmington virus are both formulated to induce an immune response against a neo-antigen. This may be accomplished by formulating the Farmington virus as an adjuvant to an antigenic protein that includes the neo-antigen, where the Farmington virus does not encode the antigenic protein. The prime may be formulated against the same antigenic protein or against a different antigenic protein, so long as the immunogenic sequence of the neo-antigen is conserved.
1. A prime:boost therapy according to the present disclosure may be used in the treatment of cancer. For example, in one aspect, provided are methods of enhancing an immune response in a mammal having a cancer, the method comprising a step of:
administering to the mammal a composition comprising a Farmington virus comprising a nucleic acid that is capable of expressing a tumour associated antigen or an epitope thereof,
wherein the prime is immunologically distinct from the Farmington virus.
In some embodiments, the mammal has brain cancer, such as glioblastoma. In some embodiments, the prime has colon cancer.
The prime and the composition comprising the Farmington virus may be administered by any of a variety of routes of administration, which may be the same or different for the prime and the composition comprising the Farmington virus. One of ordinary skill in the art reading the present specification will understand that the appropriate route of administration may depend on one or more factors, including, e.g., on the type of cancer the mammal has. In some embodiments, at least one of the prime and the composition comprising the Farmington virus is administered by a systemic route of administration. In some embodiments, at least one of the prime and the composition comprising the Farmington virus is administered by a non-systemic route of administration.
Non-limiting examples of routes of administration include intravenous, intramuscular, intraperitoneal, intranasal, intracranial, and direct injection into a tumour. For example, in the case of brain cancer, intracranial administration may be suitable. In some embodiments, the prime and/or the composition comprising the Farmington virus is administered by more than one method, e.g., both intracranially and intravenously.
In some embodiments, provided methods comprise more than one “boost” with Farmington virus, e.g., methods may further comprise a second step (and optionally a third step) of administering to the mammal a composition comprising a Farmington virus as disclosed herein. In embodiments comprising more than one “boost,” a subsequent boost may be separated by a time interval, e.g., at 50, at least 75, at least 100, or at least 120 days from the previous step of administering. In embodiments comprising at least three boosts, the time intervals between boosts may be approximately the same, or they may be different.
In some embodiments, an immune response is generated in the mammal after the step of administering the composition comprising the Farmington virus (or after each step of administering the composition). For example, the immune response can comprise an immune response specific for the tumour associated antigen (TAA), e.g., an increase in the frequency of T cells (e.g., CD8 T cells) specific for the tumour associated antigen (e.g., as determined in a sample such as a blood or serum sample from the mammal).
In some embodiments, a limited immune response, or no immune response, specific for the Farmington virus is generated in the mammal after the step of administering the composition comprising the Farmington virus (or after each step of administering the composition). For example, in some embodiments, after the step of administering the composition comprising the Farmington virus (or after each step of administering the composition), the frequency of T cells (e.g., CD8 T cells) specific for the Farmington virus is no greater than 3% (e.g., as determined in a sample such as a blood or serum sample from the mammal).
Provided prime:boost therapies may be formulated in accordance with provided methods, e.g., the prime and/or the boost may be formulated for particular routes of administration as discussed herein.
In the following examples, it should be understood that the tested primes and the tested antigenic proteins provide proof of the concept that Farmington (FMT) virus may be used to generate an immune response in prime:boost combination treatments with different primes and with different classes of antigenic peptides. As demonstrated herein, the FMT virus may provide a boost of an immune response for a variety of types of primes and antigenic peptides.
To characterize the FMT virus as a boost component in a combination prime: boost therapy, the authors of the present disclosure investigated the capacity of an FMT virus engineered to express mCMV-derived antigen m38 (FMT-m38) to expand m38-specific CD8 T cells in vivo when combined with three different primes:
1) Adenovirus (AdV) engineered to express m38 (AdV-m38),
2) adoptive cell transfer (ACT) of m38-specific CD8 memory T cells (ACT-m38) and
3) m38 peptide with adjuvant (peptide m38).
In each of these combinations FMT-m38 induced an increase in the frequencies (mean of 8.4%, 38.3% and 55.7% of all CD8 T cells for AdV-m38, ACT-m38 and m38 peptide prime, respectively, compared to 0.2% for PBS control, P<0.0001; See
The same results were observed for poly-functional CD8 T cells expressing both IFNγ and TNFα upon peptide stimulation, although not all CD8+ IFN+ T cells secreted TNFα (
Even though some types of cancers express foreign antigens (for example glioblastomas expressing CMV proteins in CMV-positive patients), in most cases cancer vaccines need to target aberrantly expressed self-antigens or cancer-specific mutations manifested by neo-epitopes presented by MHC I.
The authors of the present disclosure tested FMT virus for its ability to act as a boost against three different classes of antigens:
1) tumour associated self-antigens,
2) foreign antigens and
3) tumour-derived neo-epitopes.
A prime:boost treatment directed against DCT, a melanoma-associated self-antigen, with AdV and FMT virus expressing DCT (AdV-DCT and FMT-DCT) as a prime and boost, respectively, resulted in an expansion of DCT-specific CD8 T cells compared to group primed with AdV-DCT and boosted with FMT virus with GFP encoded instead of DCT (FMT-GFP) and PBS control (mean frequency 9.4% of all CD8 T cells vs 0.9% and 0.6% for control groups, P=0.0070, mean number 2.8×104 cells vs 0.1×104 cells and 0.05×104 cells for control groups, P=0.0076; see
Next, the authors of the present disclosure assessed the ability of FMT virus to boost immune response against tumour-derived neo-epitopes. The authors of the present disclosure generated FMT virus expressing Adpgk, Dpagt1 and Reps1 (FMT-MC-38)—neo-epitopes derived from MC-38 murine colon carcinoma cell line and used it in combination with peptide-based prime. Importantly, this FMT-MC-38 virus expressed only the peptide fragments that constitute the CD8 T cell epitopes, not the whole antigens as FMT-DCT and FMT-m38. Compared to control group that received only prime, prime combined with FMT-MC-38 boost elevated the frequencies and numbers of CD8 T cells specific for each peptide (
This demonstrates that FMT virus can be applied for immunization against different classes of antigens. Moreover, it is feasible to use engineered FMT virus for immune stimulation against one or more epitopes of interest without the necessity of expressing the whole antigen(s).
The numbers of antigen-specific effector T cells contract within days following antigen stimulation, remaining a small pool of memory T cells that upon re-stimulation with the same antigen expand in numbers and differentiate to perform effector functions. Therefore, the authors of the present disclosure examined whether the immune response induced by a boosting Farmington virus according to the present disclosure can be re-stimulated again following the contraction phase and using the same boost.
To address this, the authors of the present disclosure immunized mice against m38 antigen using FMT-m38 virus combined with ACT-m38 or m38 peptide prime and waited 120 days before boosting them again with FMT-m38 to minimize the risk of the virus being cleared by neutralizing antibodies before inducing any effect. As observed in the previous experiments, the first boost with FMT-m38 induced high m38-specific immune responses (see
Each treatment group was then divided into mice receiving FMT-m38 for the second time and mice receiving PBS instead. Second boost with FMT-m38, but not PBS, resulted in an expansion of frequencies and numbers of m38-specific CD8 T cells compared to the residual pool before the second boost (in m38 primed mice: 1.9×105 vs 0.2×105 cells, P=0.0079 for FMT-m38 2nd boost and 7.4×104 vs 3.6×104 cells, P=0.49 for PBS 2nd boost control; in ACT-m38 primed mice 1.8×104 vs 0.1×104 cells, P=0.056 for FMT-m38 2nd boost and 1238 vs 1066 cells, P=0.60 for PBS 2nd boost control,
Surprisingly, even though the m38-specific CD8 T cell response underwent slow contraction (as evident by numbers of CD8+ IFN+ cells (
To further confirm the observations described above, the authors of the present disclosure immunostimulated mice against three MC-38-derived neo-epitopes: Adpgk, Dpagt1 and Reps1. Mice were primed with either all 3 long mutant peptides or with each peptide separately and all were boosted with FMT-MC-38 virus. For control, mice were primed with all 3 peptides and boosted with PBS (prime only control). Each immunostimulation expanded the frequencies and numbers of CD8 T cells specific to each epitope compared to prime only group (
The authors of the present disclosure thus conclude that FMT-based boost has the ability to induce long-lasting antigen-specific immune responses. It is also feasible to re-stimulate the CD8 T cells in a homologous setting provided long time interval (min. 120 days in mice) is applied between the boosts. Importantly, this can be achieved for both foreign antigen and neo-epitopes, and when boosted against whole antigen or one or more epitopes.
In order to determine the anti-tumour efficacy of FMT-based prime:boost treatment in vivo, the authors of the present disclosure treated tumour-bearing immunocompetent mice with a prime:boost therapy. First the authors focused on targeting CMV antigen in glioma mouse model, as the safety profile of FMT virus makes it a particularly promising tool for targeting brain tumours. For this purpose, the authors engineered murine glioma CT2A cells to express m38 antigen and generated a stable CT2A-m38 cell line. Tumour cells extracted from mice 21 days after intracranial implantation of CT2A-m38 cells expressed major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC I) allele that presents the m38 epitope (
Interestingly, the authors observed that these tumour cells were more aggressive in vivo than the wild type CT2A cells as illustrated by MRI imaging (
In the next experiment the authors replaced AdV-m38 with ACT-m38 and reduced the number of CT2A-m38 cells from 1×104 to 3×103 cells. Despite greater immunostimulatory efficiency (frequency of m38-specific T cells: 25.3% vs 0.41% and 0.078% for prime only and PBS control, respectively, P=0.0003, number of m38-specific T cells: 1.3×105 cells vs 820 and 28 cells for prime only and PBS control, respectively, P=0.0003 (
Additionally, the authors tested the efficacy of the combination of m38 peptide prime with FMT-m38 (administered only intravenously) in mice implanted with 3×103 CT2A-m38 cells. This treatment regimen resulted in high increase in frequencies (43.0% vs 0.09%, P=0.0079) and numbers (8.1×105 vs 258 cells, P=0.0079) of m38-specific CD8 T cells and modest survival benefit (32 vs 21 days, P=0.0027) compared to PBS control (
Furthermore, the authors of the present disclosure investigated the efficiency of FMT-MC-38 virus in MC-38 subcutaneous mouse tumour model. Tumour-bearing mice were primed with Adpgk and Reps1 long mutant peptides with adjuvant, with adjuvant only or with PBS and boosted with FMT-MC-38 or PBS. Treatment with FMT-MC-38 virus only (with PBS instead of prime) resulted in the highest expansion of Adpgk-specific CD8 T cells (42.9% vs 17.1%, 15.6%, 0.11% and 0.13% in adjuvant+boost, prime+boost, prime only and PBS groups, respectively, P<0.01), and delayed tumour progression (
To summarize, the authors demonstrated in two different in vivo models that a FMT virus-based boost according to the present disclosure generates an immune response against a tumour specific antigen in tumour-bearing mice and extends their survival.
The authors of the present disclosure hypothesized that expansion of tumour specific antigen (TSA)-specific effector T cells contributed greatly to the anti-tumour efficacy of a prime:boost therapy according to the present disclosure. To test this hypothesis, the authors designed an experiment where CT2A-m38 tumour-bearing mice (i) received a prime:boost treatment against m38, or against chicken ovalbumin (OVA)—an irrelevant antigen—or (ii) were adoptively transferred with m38-specific memory T cells, but boosted with FMT virus expressing GFP (FMT-GFP) instead of m38.
As in previous experiments, a prime:boost treatment using m38 as the shared antigenic peptide induced high frequencies and numbers of m38-specific CD8 T cells and significantly extended animals' survival (
The authors of the present disclosure aimed to determine whether the T cell-dependency of a prime:boost therapy according to the present disclosure is dose-dependent. For this purpose, the authors primed CT2A-m38 tumour-bearing mice with different doses of ACT-m38 ranging from 103 to 106 cells and boosted with FMT-m38 virus. All treatments expanded the frequencies and numbers of m38-specific CD8 T cells in a dose-dependent manner (
Additionally, the authors of the present disclosure investigated different routes of administration of FMT virus and their effects on anti-tumour efficacy. The authors hypothesized that the intravenous injection would be superior for expanding TSA-specific effector T cells in peripheral blood, especially over the intracranial injection as brain is considered an immune-privileged organ. However, virus injected into the tumour could contribute directly to tumour eradication by oncolytic virus-mediated tumour cell lysis or indirectly by inducing local inflammation, modifying tumour microenvironment and increasing recruitment of cytotoxic T cells into the tumour.
The authors first examined the distribution of FMT virus in the brain and spleen in naïve mice injected intravenously (iv) or intracranially (ic). As expected, more virus was found in the brain following ic injection (mean 1.4×107 pfu that is 40% more than injected dose) compared with iv group (mean 1×104 pfu that is 0.003% of the injected dose) and spleens of iv injected mice contained more virus (mean 1.5×107 pfu that is 5% of the injected dose) than mice receiving virus by ic route (mean 4.95×104 pfu that is 0.5% of the injected dose) (
Next, the authors studied the impact of different routes of FMT-m38 administration: 1) ic, 2) iv and 3) iv followed by ic (iv+ic) on the survival of CT2A-m38 tumour-bearing mice primed with ACT-m38. Each treatment induced expansion of m38-specific CD8 T cells (frequencies 3.7%, 30.0% and 34.1% in ic, iv and iv+ic groups, respectively, vs 0.02% in PBS control, P>0.05, P<0.01 and P<0.01, respectively (
In order to assess whether a pre-existing pool of TSA-specific CD8 effector T cells would prevent the tumour progression following tumour cell implantation, the authors of the present disclosure injected CT2A-m38 intracranially in the mice previously treated with the prime:boost therapy in the experiment, discussed above, entitled “Immune response induced by an FMT virus boost can be sustained over prolonged periods of time” at 281/161 days post 1st/2nd boost (presented in
The amount of m38-specific CD8 T cells was similar before and after tumour challenge, however, varied between groups with different treatment regime (
To examine the impact of an exemplary boost according to the present disclosure on the tumour microenvironment, the authors harvested the tumour tissue from mice bearing CT2A-m38 tumours primed with m38 peptide and boosted with FMT-m38 virus intracranially or intravenously.
Blood sample was collected 6 days after boost, just before the tumour tissue harvest, in order to confirm the expansion of peripheral m38-specific CD8 T cells (
Additionally, in a separate experiment, the authors compared the cytokine and chemokine profiles of tumour microenvironment following wild-type FMT virus ic or iv injection. Tumours harvested from mice injected with FMT virus by ic route had increased concentration of IL-7 cytokine (P<0.05) important for maintenance of memory T cell pools and pro-inflammatory cytokines IL-6 and TNFα (not statistically significant) compared to tumours from iv injected mice (
Taken together, these results emphasize that injecting an FMT-based boost directly into the tumour in addition to intravenous immunization induces changes within the tumour microenvironment favourable for anti-tumour immune response as demonstrated by increased infiltration of activated CD8 T cells, reduced numbers of CD206+ macrophages and pro-inflammatory cytokine secretion.
Animal Studies
All C57Bl/6 and C57Bl/6-Ly5.1 mice were purchased from Charles River Laboratories.
Generating Cellular Product for Adoptive Cell Transfer (ACT)
Male transgenic C57BL/6N-Tg(Tcra, Tcrb)329Biat (Maxi-m38) mice—kindly provided by Dr Annette Oxenius (ETH Zurich, Switzerland) were paired with C57Bl/6-Ly5.1 female mice to establish a colony. Female OT-1 mice were purchased from Jackson Laboratories.
To generate cellular product for adoptive cell transfer (ACT), spleens from female Maxi-m38 or OT-1 mice were extracted and spleenocytes were isolated and cultured in RPMI medium supplemented with 10% FBS, non-essential amino acids, 55 mM 2β-mercaptoethanol, HEPES buffer (Stem Cell), Penicillin-Streptomycin and central memory T cell (Tcm) enrichment cocktail kindly provided by Dr Yonghong Wan (McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada) for 6-7 days.
Peptides: m38 or chicken ovalbumin (OVA) immunodominant epitope were added only at the start of culture at 1 μg/ml. The cells were passaged once or twice depending on the density. For ACT cells were harvested by pipetting, washed 2× with DPBS counted using hematocytometer with Trypan blue staining and re-suspended in DPBS. Part of the cellular product was put aside for phenotyping by flow cytometry the same day or the day after ACT. The memory phenotype was confirmed by staining with fluorochrome-conjugated antibodies: CD8-PE, CD127-PE-Cy7, CD27-PerCP-Cy5.5, KLRG1-BrilliantViolet605, CD62L-AlexaFluor700 and CCR7(CD197)-BrilliantViolet786. Fixable eFluor450 viability dye (eBioscience) was used to exclude dead cells. Over 95% of cells were CD8+ T cells and the frequency of Tcm cells defined as CD127+CD62L+ cells ranged from 40 to 60% (
Vaccination Studies in Naïve Mice
7-10 weeks old female C57Bl/6 mice were primed at day 0 with:
1) 1×108 plaque forming units (pfu) of adenovirus (AdV) expressing DCT (AdV-DCT) or m38 (AdV-m38) by bilateral intramuscular injection,
2) adoptive cell transfer (ACT) of m38- or OVA-specific CD8 memory T cells (ACT-m38 or ACT-OVA) at the dose of 1×105 cells intravenously (iv) or 3) intraperitoneally (ip) with 50 μg of one or more peptides (Biomer Technology,) with adjuvant: 30-50 μg of anti CD40 antibody (BioXCell) and 10-100 μg of poly I:C.
Mice were boosted intravenously 9-14 days later with 3×108 pfu FMT virus expressing m38 (FMT-m38), DCT (FMT-DCT), GFP (FMT-GFP) or MC-38-derived neo-epitopes Adpgk, Dpagk1 and Reps1 (FMT-MC-38). The blood was collected 5-7 days after boost and in some cases at later time points for quantification of antigen-specific T cells by ex vivo peptide stimulation and intracellular cytokine staining (ICS) assay. In one experiment mice were given 3×108 pfu FMT-m38 virus for the 2nd time 120 days following the 1st boost. In another one, mice received 3×108 pfu FMT-MC-38 virus for the 2nd time 35 days after 1st boost and for the 3rd time 124 days post 2nd boost.
Efficacy Experiments in Brain Tumour-Bearing Mice
For brain tumour efficacy studies, 7-10 weeks old female C57Bl/6 mice were injected intracranially (ic) at day 0 with CT2A-m38 cells and re-suspended in serum-free DMEM medium at a position 2.5 mm to the right and 0.5 mm anterior to bregma, 3.5 mm deep, using Hamilton syringe and infusion pump attached to stereotaxic frame. In the experiments presented in
Blood was collected 5 days after ic boost or 7 days after iv boost (day 19 post tumour implantation) for quantification of antigen-specific CD8 T cells. Mice were monitored daily for the onset of symptoms like piloerection, facial grimace, hunched back, respiratory distress or neurological symptoms (head tilt, circling, seizure) and euthanized when reached endpoint. Visible head tumours frequently occurred, however, there was always also intracranial tumour as well evident upon dissection post mortem. Whenever the cause of endpoint was in doubt, mice were dissected post mortem to confirm the presence of intracranial tumour. No virus-related acute toxicities were observed after either iv or ic FMT-m38 injection. Mice would frequently lose weight after immunization with FMT virus, however, never more than 15% and they would regain the baseline body mass within a week.
Efficacy Experiments in MC-38 Tumour-Bearing Mice
8 weeks old female C571316 mice were injected subcutaneously at day 0 with 1×105 MC-38 cells re-suspended in serum-free DMEM medium. Next day (day 1) mice were primed with 50 μg of Adpgk and Reps1 long mutant peptides with adjuvant: 30 μg of anti CD40 antibody (BioXCell) and 10 μg of poly I:C, with adjuvant alone or with PBS. On day 9 tumour were measured and only mice with tumour size 80-130 mm3 were included in the study. On day 10 mice were injected with 3×108 pfu FMT-MC-38 virus (one peptide-primed group, adjuvant-primed group and one PBS-primed group) or PBS (one peptide primed group and one PBS primed group). Tumours were measured next day and twice a week until mice reached endpoint: tumour size above 1000 mm3 or bleeding ulcers. Tumour volume was calculated with formula: (length×width×depth)/2. No virus-related acute toxicities were observed following FMT-MC-38 injection.
PBMC Isolation, Stimulation, and Intracellular Cytokine Staining (ICS) Assay
Blood was collected from mice into heparinized blood collection tubes by puncturing the saphenous vein. The blood volume was measured and blood was transferred into 15 ml conical tubes for erythrocyte lysis with ACK lysis buffer. The PBMCs were re-suspended in RPMI medium supplemented with 10% FBS, non-essential amino acids, 55 mM 2β-mercaptoethanol, HEPES buffer (Stem Cell) and Penicillin-Streptomycin and transferred to 96 well round-bottom plates. Each sample was split into either 3 wells (antigen stimulation, FMT-derived epitope stimulation and no-stimulation control) or 4 wells in experiments with MC-38 derived epitopes (1 for each epitope separately and unstimulated control). For unstimulated control, 0.1-0.4% DMSO (Sigma) in RPMI was added as the peptides stock solutions were made in DMSO. Blood samples from naïve mice were used for extra controls of peptide stimulation, for staining-negative controls and for PMA and lonomycin stimulated (at 100 ng/ml and 1 μg/ml, respectively) positive controls. The peptides were added at a concentrations 0.5 μg/ml, 1 μg/ml, 1 μg/ml or 5 μg/ml for OVA, m38, FMT or MC-38 peptides, respectively. Following 1 h incubation at 37° C., 5% CO2, GolgiPlug (BD Biosciences) was added to each well at 0.2 μl per well and incubated for 4 h more. Cells were then washed, transferred to 96 well v-bottom plates (EverGreen) and stored overnight at 4° C. Next day ICS assay was performed. Briefly, cells were washed with FACS buffer (0.5% BSA in PBS), stained with CD8-PE, TCR-BrilliantViolet711 and CD45.1-PerCP-Cy5.5 antibodies and Fixable eFluor450 viability dye (eBioscience), washed with FACS buffer, fixed and permeabilized with Fixation and permeabilization kit (BD Bioscienses), stained with IFNγ-AlexaFluor647, TNFα-PE-Cy7 and IL-2-BrilliantViolet605 antibodies and re-suspended in FACS buffer. Data were acquired on BD LSR Fortessa X20 flow cytometer with HTS unit (BD Biosciences) and data were analysed using FlowJo (TriStar) software. The debris and doublets were excluded by gating on FSC vs SSC and FSC-A vs FSC-H, respectively. Viable cells were gated based on viability dye stain. Next, CD8-positive and TCR-positive cells were gated and within this population the expression of IFNγ, TNFα and IL-2 was examined. Cell numbers were calculated with the following formula:
where N—resulting positive cell number per 1 ml of blood, Ns—number of positive cells in the well containing peptide, Nu—number of positive cells in unstimulated control, Vm—total blood volume collected from animal, W—number of wells the blood sample was distributed into, Vf—fraction of sample volume used for data acquisition by flow cytometry i.e. 80 μl out of 130 μl.
Characterization of Tumour Microenvironment
Phenotyping of Tumour-Infiltrating Immune Cells
7 weeks old female C57Bl/6 mice were injected intracranially (ic) at day 0 with 3×103 CT2A-m38 cells and re-suspended in serum-free DMEM medium at a position 2.5 mm to the right and 0.5 mm anterior to bregma, 3.5 mm deep, using Hamilton syringe and infusion pump attached to stereotaxic frame. At day 3, mice were primed with 50 μg m38 peptide with adjuvant: 30 μg of anti CD40 antibody (BioXCell) and 10 μg of poly I:C or with PBS. 9 days later mice were boosted with either 1×107 pfu FMT-m38 injected ic at the same position but 2.5 mm deep, with 3×108 pfu FMT-m38 iv, or with PBS ic. 6 days after boost blood was collected to confirm the presence of m38-specific CD8 T cells in peripheral blood and afterwards mice were euthanized and tumour tissue was collected. The tumour tissue was dissociated with Neural Tissue Dissociation kit (Miltenyi Biotech) and the cells purified with Percoll gradient method. Cells were then kept overnight at 4° C. The next day, cells were washed with FACS buffer and stained with fluorochrome-conjugated antibodies: CD11b-BrilliantViolet421, CD4-BrilliantViolet510, CD86-BrilliantViolet605, CD3-BrilliantViolet650, F4/80-BrilliantViolet711, CD137-BrilliantViolet785, CD8-AlexaFluor488, CD45-PerCP-Cy5.5, NKp46-PE, CD206-PE-Cy7 and with m38-tetramer-APC. Fixable near-IR viability dye (eBioscience) was used to exclude dead cells. Data were acquired using BS LSR Fortessa X20 flow cytometer (BD Biosciences) and analysed with FlowJo (TriStar) software.
Statistics
Kaplan-Meier survival curves were generated in GraphPad version 5.0f (Prism) software and compared using Log-rank (Mantel-Cox) test. P value below 0.05 was considered significant. Frequencies and numbers of immune cells, cytokine and chemokine concentrations were compared across treatment groups in GraphPad version 5.0f (Prism) software using statistical test indicated in the figure legend. P value below 0.05 was considered significant.
In the preceding description, for purposes of explanation, numerous details are set forth in order to provide a thorough understanding of the examples. However, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that these specific details are not required. Accordingly, what has been described is merely illustrative of the application of the described examples and numerous modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teachings.
Since the above description provides examples, it will be appreciated that modifications and variations can be effected to the particular examples by those of skill in the art. Accordingly, the scope of the claims should not be limited by the particular examples set forth herein, but should be construed in a manner consistent with the specification as a whole.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/CA2019/050433 | 4/9/2019 | WO | 00 |