Abstract

Homologous prime-boost vaccinations with live vectors typically fail to induce repeated strong CD8+ T cell responses due to the induction of anti-vector immunity, highlighting the need for alternative delivery vehicles. The unique ether lipids of archaea may be constituted into liposomes, archaeosomes, which do not induce anti-carrier responses, making them an ideal candidate for use in repeat vaccination systems. Herein, we evaluated in mice the maximum threshold of antigen-specific CD8+ T cell responses that may be induced by multiple homologous immunizations with ovalbumin (OVA) entrapped in archaeosomes derived from the ether glycerolipids of the archaeon Methanobrevibacter smithii (MS-OVA). Up to three immunizations with MS-OVA administered in optimized intervals (to allow for sufficient resting of the primed cells prior to boosting), induced a potent anti-OVA CD8+ T cell response of up to 45% of all circulating CD8+ T cells. Additional MS-OVA injections did not add any further benefit in increasing the memory of CD8+ T cell frequency. In contrast, OVA expressed by Listeria monocytogenes (LM-OVA), an intracellular bacterial vector failed to evoke a boosting effect after the second injection, resulting in significantly reduced antigen-specific CD8+ T cell frequencies. Furthermore, repeated vaccination with MS-OVA skewed the response increasingly towards an effector memory (CD62low) phenotype. Vaccinated animals were challenged with B16-OVA at late time points after vaccination (+7 months) and were afforded protection compared to control. Therefore, archaeosomes constituted a robust particulate delivery system to unravel the kinetics of CD8+ T cell response induction and memory maintenance and constitute an efficient vaccination regimen optimized for tumor protection.

Highlights

  • CD8+ T cells are an important component of successful anti-tumor immune responses and, predictably, most cancer vaccines aim to expand tumor specific CD8+ T cells

  • Archaeosomes constituted a robust particulate delivery system to unravel the kinetics of CD8+ T cell response induction and memory maintenance and constitute an efficient vaccination regimen optimized for tumor protection

  • We have shown that archaeosomes constitute a robust particulate delivery system that can be used in a homologous repeat boost vaccination regime to induce high levels of OVA-CD8+ T cells reaching 45% of all circulating CD8+ T cells with three vaccinations

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Summary

Introduction

CD8+ T cells are an important component of successful anti-tumor immune responses and, predictably, most cancer vaccines aim to expand tumor specific CD8+ T cells. Potent adjuvants that trigger macrophage activation, major histocompatibility complex (MHC) and co-stimulatory molecule expression and modulate the immune check-point responses are thought to be required in an effective anti-cancer vaccine. While live attenuated vectors represent a robust method to provide adjuvanting signals, their use can be complicated by the risk of reversion to virulence and anti-vector immunity. Other methods include the use of conventional liposomes derived from eubacterial or synthetic ester phospholipids; these are typically designed to deliver cargo antigen [12], they fail to produce strong co-stimulation and must incorporate immuno-stimulants such as Lipid A [13], CpG oligonucleotides [14], or other pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPS) [15] to cause sufficient co-stimulation signals to generate a robust CD8+ T cell response

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