Approaches to Increase the Immunogenicity of Carbohydrate Antigens Using PS A1 and Subsequent Immunotherapies

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Trabbic, Kevin R.
Language:English
Published: University of Toledo / OhioLINK 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=toledo1470330973
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record_format oai_dc
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Chemistry
Immunology
zwitterionic polysaccharides
vaccines
immunotherapy
tumor associated carbohydrate antigens
spellingShingle Chemistry
Immunology
zwitterionic polysaccharides
vaccines
immunotherapy
tumor associated carbohydrate antigens
Trabbic, Kevin R.
Approaches to Increase the Immunogenicity of Carbohydrate Antigens Using PS A1 and Subsequent Immunotherapies
author Trabbic, Kevin R.
author_facet Trabbic, Kevin R.
author_sort Trabbic, Kevin R.
title Approaches to Increase the Immunogenicity of Carbohydrate Antigens Using PS A1 and Subsequent Immunotherapies
title_short Approaches to Increase the Immunogenicity of Carbohydrate Antigens Using PS A1 and Subsequent Immunotherapies
title_full Approaches to Increase the Immunogenicity of Carbohydrate Antigens Using PS A1 and Subsequent Immunotherapies
title_fullStr Approaches to Increase the Immunogenicity of Carbohydrate Antigens Using PS A1 and Subsequent Immunotherapies
title_full_unstemmed Approaches to Increase the Immunogenicity of Carbohydrate Antigens Using PS A1 and Subsequent Immunotherapies
title_sort approaches to increase the immunogenicity of carbohydrate antigens using ps a1 and subsequent immunotherapies
publisher University of Toledo / OhioLINK
publishDate 2016
url http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=toledo1470330973
work_keys_str_mv AT trabbickevinr approachestoincreasetheimmunogenicityofcarbohydrateantigensusingpsa1andsubsequentimmunotherapies
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spelling ndltd-OhioLink-oai-etd.ohiolink.edu-toledo14703309732021-08-03T06:38:02Z Approaches to Increase the Immunogenicity of Carbohydrate Antigens Using PS A1 and Subsequent Immunotherapies Trabbic, Kevin R. Chemistry Immunology zwitterionic polysaccharides vaccines immunotherapy tumor associated carbohydrate antigens Zwitterionic polysaccharides (ZPS) are emerging as a viable alternative to protein carriers for vaccines and immunotherapeutics. PS A1 and PS B from Bacteroides fragilis (ATCC 25285;/NTTC 9343) are natural, zwitterionic carbohydrate-based polymers that can generate a CD4+ T cell mediated immune response and have recently been investigated as T cell carriers for tumor associated carbohydrate antigens (TACAs). TACAs represent suitable targets for cancer immunotherapies because, they are expressed on virtually all cancers and are known to be weakly immunogenic. The immune response to TACAs can be increased by conjugation to immunogenic materials such as proteins or lipids. Therefore, we hypothesize using ZPS as immunogenic carriers for TACAs, can augment the immune response by generating entirely carbohydrate specific antibodies. The rationale behind this carbohydrate-based construct was to fine-tune the immune response to target carbohydrate specific lectins and generate antibodies that exclusively recognize carbohydrates without the background binding to proteins or peptides, a long outstanding problem in increasing immunogenicity. To take advantage of the unique immune response to ZPS, we aimed to generate immunotherapies to target tumor glycosides. In previous work emanating from our group, the Thomsen-Nouveau was conjugated to PS A1, creating an entirely carbohydrate vaccine or immunotherapeutic (Tn-PS A1) and illustrated to have a robust immune response. Adapting the same approach to investigating the TF antigen (Thomsen Friedenreich antigen, TF was conjugated to another ZPS PS B. The novel TF-PS B conjugate was immunized in Jax C57BL/6 mice to produce both IgG and IgM antibody responses specific for the TF antigen. The study was concluded by showing enhanced binding to the TF-containing MCF-7 breast cancer cell line by fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS). Additionally, TF-PS A1 elicited similar augmented immune responses to the TF antigen, which enabled in vitro cytotoxicity of tumor cells. In comparison to Tn-PS A1, both the TF-PS B and TF-PS A1 immunogens generated substantial decreased IgG antibody production, which is a main component of the mechanism for tumor elimination. However, an innovative strategy was used to increase the IgG immune responses to the TF antigen through the design and synthesis of a novel bivalent PS A1 construct design capitalizing on the knowledge gained through experimentation with first generation constructs.The importance of cancer vaccine design and development was demonstrated through an immunological investigation of monovalent Tn- and TF-PS A1 constructs leading to a novel, unimolecular Tn-TF-PS A1 bivalent immunogen which significantly increased immunogenicity of the TF antigen (recall: TF-PS A1 did not render a high antibody titer response in mice). This additive Tn adjuvanting effect was also demonstrated to generate enhanced IgG binding to tumor cell lines MCF-7 and OVCAR-5 in FACS analysis and in a complement dependent cytotoxicity (CDC) assay monitoring lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release from noted tumor cells. The results from the CDC assay demonstrated increased tumor cell lysis from Tn-TF-PS A1 sera compared to sera from monovalent vaccines Tn-PS A1 and TF-PS A1. Furthermore, a macrophage galactose lectin 2 (MGL2) assay was used, in conjunction with designed biotinylated probes, to study binding interactions of Tn and TF conjugated to PS A1 vaccine constructs. Our observations concluded that, in the case of the TF antigen, when a unimolecular bivalent Tn-TF-PS A1 immunogen was used, immunogenicity of the TF antigen was increased 50 times over a monovalent TF-PS A1 construct and resulted in a more potent and selective immune response. This work not only validated a MGL2 targeted vaccine design but the premise of which would influence other peptide, protein, or lipid vaccine designs by incorporating Tn antigen. To prove the utility of unimolecular bivalent immunogens, this model was adapted to Globo H-PS A1 construct consisting of Globo H and Tn. Similar to the biological results of Tn-TF-PS A1, the Tn-Globo H-PS A1 immunogen produced a robust IgG immune response with cytotoxicity towards both MCF-7 and HCT-116 cancer cells. 2016 English text University of Toledo / OhioLINK http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=toledo1470330973 http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=toledo1470330973 unrestricted This thesis or dissertation is protected by copyright: all rights reserved. It may not be copied or redistributed beyond the terms of applicable copyright laws.