Adjuvant System 04 (AS04) combines the TLR4 agonist MPL (3-O-desacyl-4′-monophosphoryl lipid A) and aluminum salt. It is a new generation TLR-based adjuvant licensed for use in human vaccines. One of these vaccines, the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine Cervarix, is used in this study to elucidate the mechanism of action of AS04 in human cells and in mice. The adjuvant activity of AS04 was found to be strictly dependent on AS04 and the HPV Ags being injected at the same i.m. site within 24 h of each other. During this period, AS04 transiently induced local NF-κB activity and cytokine production. This led to an increased number of activated Ag-loaded dendritic cells and monocytes in the lymph node draining the injection site, which further increased the activation of Ag-specific T cells. AS04 was also found to directly stimulate those APCs in vitro but not directly stimulate CD4+ T or B lymphocytes. These AS04-induced innate responses were primarily due to MPL. Aluminum salt appeared not to synergize with or inhibit MPL, but rather it prolonged the cytokine responses to MPL at the injection site. Altogether these results support a model in which the addition of MPL to aluminum salt enhances the vaccine response by rapidly triggering a local cytokine response leading to an optimal activation of APCs. The transient and confined nature of these responses provides further supporting evidence for the favorable safety profile of AS04 adjuvanted vaccines.
The HPV-16/18 vaccine (Cervarix) is a prophylactic vaccine for the prevention of cervical cancer and contains recombinant virus-like particles (VLPs) assembled from the L1 major capsid proteins of human papillomavirus (HPV) strains 16 and 18. Although a correlate of protection has yet to be identified, HPV-specific antibodies are thought to prevent virus infection of the genital mucosa. Therefore, antigen-specific antibodies as assessed by ELISA or pseudovirion-based neutralisation assay are frequently measured in clinical trials to substantiate the immune responses induced by the vaccine. Measuring antigen-antibody binding avidities, which reflects the degree of affinity maturation in the B-cells, is another valuable method to assess the quality of the antibody responses. Here we describe the antigen-specific antibody avidities in samples taken from a clinical trial examining the feasibility of adopting a two-dose (Months 0 and 6) schedule for 9-14 year olds instead of the three-dose schedule (Months 0, 1 and 6). Antibody avidity (i.e. avidity index [AI]) was determined in the ELISA by the ratio of antibody concentrations in serum samples treated or not with the chaotropic agent NaSCN. Importantly, in the comparison between the groups of two-dose and three-dose recipients, no differences in AIs were observed at Months 7, 24 and 48. The results suggest that from Month 7 to 48, the quality of the antibody response in terms of avidity was similar in the two-dose recipients to that in the three-dose recipients. Hence these results support the adoption of a two-dose schedule in 9-14 year-old girls.
Background: The MAGE-A genes encode antigens that are of particular interest for antitumor immunotherapy because they are strictly tumor specific and are shared by many tumors. We developed a rapid method to identify the MAGE-A genes expressed in tumors.
Methods: A low-density DNA microarray was designed to discriminate between the 12 MAGE-A cDNAs amplified by PCR with only one pair of consensus primers. The assay involved reverse transcription of total RNA with oligo(dT) primer, followed by PCR amplification and hybridization on a microarray. Amplification in the presence of Biotin-16-dUTP allowed subsequent detection of the amplicons on the microarray carrying 12 capture probes, each being specific for a MAGE-A gene. Probe–amplicon hybrids were detected by a streptavidin-based method.
Results: PCR conditions were optimized for low detection limits and comparable amplification efficiencies among all MAGE-A nucleotide sequences. The microarray assay was validated with a panel of 32 samples, by comparison with well-established reverse transcription-PCR assays relying on amplification with primers specific for each gene. Virtually identical results were obtained with both methods, except for MAGE-A3 and MAGE-A5. Detection of MAGE-A5 was more sensitive with the microarray assay. Detection of MAGE-A3 was hampered by the presence of MAGE-A6, which is 98% identical: the MAGE-A3 capture probe cross-hybridized with MAGE-A6 amplicons because these sequences differed by only a single base.
Conclusions: This post-PCR microarray assay could be useful to evaluate MAGE expression in tumors before therapeutic vaccinations with MAGE-A gene products.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.