Abstract

71 Background: CD8+ T cells can inhibit tumor progression, but their induction is hampered by the low immunogenicity of most tumor antigens. HSV-1 glycoprotein D (gD), when genetically expressed as a fusion protein with tumor antigens, serves as a checkpoint inhibitor of the B and T cell attenuator (BTLA)-herpes virus entry mediator (HVEM) pathway, which acts early during T cell activation. HSV-1 gD thereby augments antigen-driven CD8+ T cell responses. We describe the immunogenicity and efficacy of a chimpanzee adenoviral vector (AdC) vaccine containing a detoxified E7/E6/E5(AdC-gDE765dt) sequence of HPV-16 fused into gD. Methods: The frequency of HPV-16 E7-specific CD8+ T-cells was assessed by tetramer staining in C57/Bl6 mice 14 days after a single IM vaccination with AdC vectors encoding wild-type or mutant HPV-16 oncoproteins expressed within gD, a non-HVEM-binding form of gD or without gD. Efficacy was tested in a TC-1 tumor cell challenge model with mice receiving no treatment or a single IM vaccine injection 3 days after tumor cell transplantation. Mice were followed for 80 days. Results: The addition of gD increases HPV-16 E7-specific CD8+ T-cell frequencies approximately 10-fold. T cell responses are similar to AdC vaccines expressing wild-type or mutant oncoproteins within gD. All AdC-gDE765dt treated mice show delayed tumor progression after a single vaccination with 50% of animals remaining tumor-free at study completion. Conclusions: These results show that the addition of gD, an early checkpoint inhibitor, which acts locally at the site of T cell stimulation, to an HPV-16 vaccine markedly improves the vaccine’s immunogenicity and efficacy. AdC-gDE765dt is currently in GMP manufacture for Phase 1 investigation in HPV-16 infected patients.

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