The recent identification of tumor Ags as potential vaccines has prompted the search for efficient adjuvants and delivery systems, especially in the case of peptide-based vaccination protocols. Here, we investigated the adjuvant potential of the recombinant 40-kDa outer membrane protein of Klebsiella pneumoniae (P40) for specific CTL induction. We studied the CTL response induced in HLA-A0201/K(b) transgenic mice immunized with peptides derived from two melanoma-associated differentiation Ags, the HLA-A0201-restricted decapeptide Melan-A(26--35) substituted at position 2 and the K(b)-restricted tyrosinase-related protein 2(181--188) T cell epitope. We found that both peptides are able to generate a specific CTL response when mixed with the protein in the absence of conventional adjuvant. This CTL response is a function of the amount of P40 used for immunization. Moreover, the CTL response generated against the tyrosinase-related protein 2(181-188) peptide in presence of P40 is associated with tumor protection in two different experimental models and is independent of the presence of CD4(+) T lymphocytes. Thus, the recombinant bacterial protein P40 functions as a potent immunological adjuvant for specific CTL induction.
Bruno Emanuel Ferreira De Sousa Correia, Casper Alexander Goverde
Jacques Fellay, Bruno Emanuel Ferreira De Sousa Correia, Andreas Scheck, Olivier Noël Marie Naret, Arne Schneuing, David Gfeller, Thomas Junier, Zhi Ming Xu, Dylan Lawless, Sina Rüeger
Françoise Gisou van der Goot Grunberg, Laurence Gouzi Abrami, Francisco De Magalhães Sarmento R De Mesquita