Induction Of Protective Anti-Ctl Epitope Responses Against Her-2-Positive Breast Cancer Based On Multivalent T7 Phage Nanoparticles

PLOS ONE(2012)

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Abstract
We report here the development of multivalent T7 bacteriophage nanoparticles displaying an immunodominant H-2k(d)-restricted CTL epitope derived from the rat HER2/neu oncoprotein. The immunotherapeutic potential of the chimeric T7 nanoparticles as anti-cancer vaccine was investigated in BALB/c mice in an implantable breast tumor model. The results showed that T7 phage nanoparticles confer a high immunogenicity to the HER-2-derived minimal CTL epitope, as shown by inducing robust CTL responses. Furthermore, the chimeric nanoparticles protected mice against HER-2-positive tumor challenge in both prophylactic and therapeutic setting. In conclusion, these results suggest that CTL epitope-carrying T7 phage nanoparticles might be a promising approach for development of T cell epitope-based cancer vaccines.
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Key words
biology,interleukin 4,engineering,physics,medicine,nanoparticles,protein binding,cell line,amino acid sequence,chemistry
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