Vaccine Development

Human Papillomavirus Immunogen That Provides Protective Tumor Immunity and Induces Tumor Regression

    Published Online:https://doi.org/10.1089/vim.2011.0066

    Human papillomavirus (HPV) is associated with premalignant lesions such as high-grade cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN-III) with potential progression to cervical carcinoma. There are now preventive vaccines against HPV. However, no effective therapeutic vaccine or immunological treatment exists for individuals already infected or for the 470,000 women that develop high-grade dysplasia, carcinoma in situ, and cervical cancer each year. More than half of these women die from cervical cancer. Relative non-immunogenicity of HPV infection is one of the main reasons for the difficulty in designing a comprehensive therapeutic vaccine against HPV-induced premalignant lesions and cervical carcinoma. HPV E6 and E7 proteins, the major HPV oncogenes, are highly immunogenic but fail to induce cross-reactive and protective immune responses against heterologous strains. We designed and synthesized a therapeutic peptide vaccine comprised of multivalent peptide mixtures called hypervariable epitope constructs (HECs) that represent the major epitope variants of the oncogenic E7 structural protein, and assessed their immunogenicity and in vivo efficacy in mice. Our results show that this peptide vaccine can induce strong, HPV-specific, T-helper cell and CTL responses. More significantly, we have demonstrated that the vaccine is efficacious as a therapeutic agent in a mouse HPV tumor model. Therefore, the HPV HEC vaccine approach described herein can potentially prevent progression of HPV-associated premalignant lesions, and may also be therapeutic against tumors associated with HPV.

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