Salmonella Vaccine Carrier Strains: Effective Delivery System to Trigger Anti-tumor Immunity by Oral Route
Overview
Affiliations
Recombinant Salmonella strains expressing heterologous antigens can be delivered by oral route triggering the elicitation of efficient antigen-specific humoral, T helper and cytotoxic responses. The potential of attenuated Salmonella spp. to trigger anti-tumor immunity was evaluated for the first time by using beta-galactosidase (beta-gal) as a model tumor-associated antigen (TAA). Beta-gal was expressed in a Salmonella typhimurium aroA vaccine carrier strain either constitutively or under the control of a promoter activated upon infection. Oral immunization with both vaccine prototypes resulted in the elicitation of beta-gal-specific humoral and cell-mediated immunity. Although both strains were able to trigger antigen-specific CTL, responses were more efficient when the expression was controlled by the promoter activated upon infection. The anti-tumor efficacy of the stimulated response was validated by challenging vaccinated animals with an aggressive fibrosarcoma transfected with beta-gal, which operationally acts as a TAA. Both groups of vaccinated mice exhibited a significant reduction in tumor take and growth with respect to animals vaccinated with plasmidless carrier (p < 0.05). However, the overall efficiency was better in the group in which beta-gal was controlled by the in vivo-activated promoter (85% versus 54%; p < 0.05).
as a Promising Curative Tool against Cancer.
Aganja R, Sivasankar C, Senevirathne A, Lee J Pharmaceutics. 2022; 14(10).
PMID: 36297535 PMC: 9609134. DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14102100.
Recombinant Attenuated as a Delivery System of Heterologous Molecules in Cancer Therapy.
Becerra-Baez E, Meza-Toledo S, Munoz-Lopez P, Flores-Martinez L, Fraga-Perez K, Magano-Bocanegra K Cancers (Basel). 2022; 14(17).
PMID: 36077761 PMC: 9454573. DOI: 10.3390/cancers14174224.
Engineering of a rough auxotrophic mutant Typhimurium for effective delivery.
Lalsiamthara J, Kim J, Lee J Oncotarget. 2018; 9(39):25441-25457.
PMID: 29876000 PMC: 5986645. DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.25192.
Attenuating gene expression (AGE) for vaccine development.
Pascual D, Suo Z, Cao L, Avci R, Yang X Virulence. 2013; 4(5):384-90.
PMID: 23652809 PMC: 3714130. DOI: 10.4161/viru.24886.
Listeria and Salmonella bacterial vectors of tumor-associated antigens for cancer immunotherapy.
Paterson Y, Guirnalda P, Wood L Semin Immunol. 2010; 22(3):183-9.
PMID: 20299242 PMC: 4411241. DOI: 10.1016/j.smim.2010.02.002.