@phdthesis{Hotz2008, author = {Hotz, Christian}, title = {Improvement of Salmonella vaccine strains for cancer immune therapy based on secretion or surface display of antigens}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-29548}, school = {Universit{\"a}t W{\"u}rzburg}, year = {2008}, abstract = {Cancer immune therapy represents a promising alternative to conventional anti tumour therapy like radiation, surgical excision of the tumour or classical chemotherapy. The biggest advantage of cancer immune therapy is specificity, achieved by targeting tumour-associated antigens with the effector arms of the host immune system. This is believed to result in less adverse effects than standard therapy and reaches presumably also metastatic lesions at distant sites from the primary tumour. However, cancer immune therapy by vaccination against tumour antigens failed to translate into clinical success, yet. Furthermore, despite tremendous clinical efforts malignant disease still results in high mortalities giving rise to the need for novel vaccination-based therapies against cancer. An interesting approach in this respect is the use of bacteria like attenuated salmonellae as carriers for heterologous cancer antigens. In numerous preclinical studies Salmonella-based vaccines could elicit cell mediated immune responses of the CD4+ and CD8+ type against own and heterologous antigens which make them ideally suited for anti tumour therapy. Special delivery systems in Salmonella carriers like surface display or secretion of antigens were shown to be advantageous for the immunological outcome. This work focussed on developing novel Salmonella carriers for immune therapy against cancer. In a first project, TolC, a multifunctional outer membrane protein of E. coli was utilized as membrane anchor for 3 heterologous antigens. Respective TolC fusion proteins encoded on plasmids were analysed for expression, functionality and plasmid stability in different engineered Salmonella strains. The amount of membrane localized recombinant TolC was enhanced in tolC-deficient strains. Furthermore, fusion proteins were functional and plasmid stability was very high in vitro and in vivo. Disappointingly, neither specific CD4+/CD8+ T-cell responses against the model antigen ovalbumin nor CD8+ responses against the cancer antigen BRAFV600E were detectable in murine model systems. However, mice immunized with Salmonella strains displaying an immunodominant epitope of the cancer related prostate specific antigen (PSA) were partially protected from subsequent tumour challenge with a PSA expressing melanoma cell line. Tumour growth in mice immunized with the respective strain was significantly decelerated compared to controls, thus indicating that this surface display system confers protective immunity against tumours. In a second study, the approved typhoid vaccine strain Salmonella enterica serovar Typhi Ty21a (Ty21a) was improved for the hemolysin type I secretion system of E. coli. This secretion system is widely used for heterologous antigen delivery in live bacterial vaccines. It was demonstrated throughout this work that a mutation of rpoS in Ty21a correlated with decreased ability for hemolysin secretion compared to other Salmonella strains. Complementation with rpoS or the presumed downstream target of rpoS, rfaH resulted in enhanced expression and secretion of heterologous hemolysin in Ty21a. Presumably by raising the amount of free antigen, rfaHcomplemented Ty21a elicited higher antibody titres against heterologous hemolysin in immunized mice than controls and even rpoS-positive Ty21a. Therefore, rfaHcomplemented Ty21a could form the basis of a novel generation of vaccines for human use based on (cancer) antigen secretion.}, subject = {Impfstoff}, language = {en} }