posted on 2012-05-30, 00:00authored byZhi-Hua Huang, Lei Shi, Jing-Wen Ma, Zhan-Yi Sun, Hui Cai, Yong-Xiang Chen, Yu-Fen Zhao, Yan-Mei Li
In the development of vaccines for epithelial tumors,
the key targets are MUC1 proteins, which have a variable number of
tandem repeats (VNTR) bearing tumor-associated carbohydrate antigens
(TACAs), such as Tn and STn. A major obstacle in vaccine development
is the low immunogenicity of the short MUC1 peptide. To overcome this
obstacle, we designed, synthesized, and evaluated several totally
synthetic self-adjuvanting vaccine candidates with self-assembly domains.
These vaccine candidates aggregated into fibrils and displayed multivalent
B-cell epitopes under mild conditions. Glycosylation of Tn antigen
on the Thr residue of PDTRP sequence in MUC1 VNTR led to effective
immune response. These vaccines elicited a high level antibody response
without any adjuvant and induced antibodies that recognized human
breast tumor cells. These vaccines appeared to act through a T-cell
independent pathway and were associated with the activation of cytotoxic
T cells. These fully synthetic, molecularly defined vaccine candidates
had several features that hold promise for anticancer therapy.