Catarina Pinto, Romana Bischl, Lea Knezevic, Sarah Ahmadi-Erber, Katell Bidet Huang, Sarah Schmidt, Peter Steinberger, Klaus K Orlinger, Henning Lauterbach, Josipa Raguz
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Preclinical development of a mutant KRAS targeting therapeutic cancer vaccine.
KRAS mutations are frequent oncogenic drivers in several indications, yet limited targeted therapy options are available. Here we engineered our clinically validated artARENA platform to develop an "off-the-shelf" shared neoantigen vaccine, capable of triggering potent CD8+ T-cell responses against the five most prevalent KRAS mutations (G12D, G12V, G12C, G12R, and G13D). Alternating two-vector therapy (sequential administration of artPICV-based vector followed by artLCMV-based vector, encoding the same optimized antigen construct) induced KRAS neoepitope-specific polyfunctional T-cell responses in HLA transgenic mouse strains, showing direct cytotoxicity against KRAS-mutant cell targets in an in vivo assay. Importantly, no cross-reactivity to wt KRAS was observed, highlighting the safety of the approach. Immunogenicity data in mice was corroborated in vitro using T cell stimulation assays, confirming the antigenicity of the construct. Taken together, these results and the clinically validated favorable safety and immunogenicity profiles of our platform warrant clinical translation of this program with the aim to provide more durable and comprehensive tumor control in patients harboring KRAS mutated tumors.
期刊介绍:
Cancer Gene Therapy is the essential gene and cellular therapy resource for cancer researchers and clinicians, keeping readers up to date with the latest developments in gene and cellular therapies for cancer. The journal publishes original laboratory and clinical research papers, case reports and review articles. Publication topics include RNAi approaches, drug resistance, hematopoietic progenitor cell gene transfer, cancer stem cells, cellular therapies, homologous recombination, ribozyme technology, antisense technology, tumor immunotherapy and tumor suppressors, translational research, cancer therapy, gene delivery systems (viral and non-viral), anti-gene therapy (antisense, siRNA & ribozymes), apoptosis; mechanisms and therapies, vaccine development, immunology and immunotherapy, DNA synthesis and repair.
Cancer Gene Therapy publishes the results of laboratory investigations, preclinical studies, and clinical trials in the field of gene transfer/gene therapy and cellular therapies as applied to cancer research. Types of articles published include original research articles; case reports; brief communications; review articles in the main fields of drug resistance/sensitivity, gene therapy, cellular therapy, tumor suppressor and anti-oncogene therapy, cytokine/tumor immunotherapy, etc.; industry perspectives; and letters to the editor.