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Vaccination Against Androgen Receptor Splice Variants to Immunologically Target Prostate Cancer.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Marek, RD; Halabi, S; Wang, M-E; McBane, J; Wei, J; Wang, T; Yang, X; Liu, C; Lei, G; Lyerly, HK; Chen, M; Trotter, TN; Hartman, ZC
Published in: Vaccines (Basel)
November 13, 2024

Background/Objectives: Androgen receptor (AR) expression and signaling are critical for the progression of prostate cancer and have been the therapeutic focus of prostate cancer for over 50 years. While a variety of agents have been developed to target this axis, many of these fail due to the emergent expression of AR RNA splice variants, such as AR-V7, that can signal independently of ligand binding. Other therapies, such as vaccination against prostate-specific antigens, have achieved FDA approvals but have fallen short of being incorporated as standard-of-care therapies for advanced prostate cancer. This may be due to the elevated level of immunosuppression observed in prostate cancer, which remains largely refractory to immune checkpoint blockade. Methods: We developed a vaccine targeting AR-V7, a common isoform associated with treatment resistance, and demonstrated its ability to elicit AR-V7-specific immunity and enable anti-tumor responses against AR-V7+ cancers in subcutaneous tumor models. Results: Our studies also revealed that AR-V7 expression conferred an immune suppressive phenotype that was significant in a non-AR-dependent prostate cancer model. Notably, in this model, we found that vaccination in combination with enzalutamide, an AR antagonist, suppressed these aggressive immune suppressive cancers and resulted in enhanced survival in comparison to control vaccinated and enzalutamide-treated mice. While anti-PD-1 immune checkpoint inhibition (ICI) alone slowed tumor growth, the majority of vaccinated mice that received anti-PD-1 therapy showed complete tumor elimination. Conclusions: Collectively, these results validate the importance of AR signaling in prostate cancer immune suppression and suggest the potential of AR-V7-specific vaccines as therapeutic strategies against prostate cancer, offering significant protective and therapeutic anti-tumor responses, even in the presence of androgen signaling inhibitors.

Duke Scholars

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Published In

Vaccines (Basel)

DOI

ISSN

2076-393X

Publication Date

November 13, 2024

Volume

12

Issue

11

Location

Switzerland

Related Subject Headings

  • 3207 Medical microbiology
  • 3204 Immunology
  • 3202 Clinical sciences
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Marek, R. D., Halabi, S., Wang, M.-E., McBane, J., Wei, J., Wang, T., … Hartman, Z. C. (2024). Vaccination Against Androgen Receptor Splice Variants to Immunologically Target Prostate Cancer. Vaccines (Basel), 12(11). https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines12111273
Marek, Robert D., Selena Halabi, Mu-En Wang, Jason McBane, Junping Wei, Tao Wang, Xiao Yang, et al. “Vaccination Against Androgen Receptor Splice Variants to Immunologically Target Prostate Cancer.Vaccines (Basel) 12, no. 11 (November 13, 2024). https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines12111273.
Marek RD, Halabi S, Wang M-E, McBane J, Wei J, Wang T, et al. Vaccination Against Androgen Receptor Splice Variants to Immunologically Target Prostate Cancer. Vaccines (Basel). 2024 Nov 13;12(11).
Marek, Robert D., et al. “Vaccination Against Androgen Receptor Splice Variants to Immunologically Target Prostate Cancer.Vaccines (Basel), vol. 12, no. 11, Nov. 2024. Pubmed, doi:10.3390/vaccines12111273.
Marek RD, Halabi S, Wang M-E, McBane J, Wei J, Wang T, Yang X, Liu C, Lei G, Lyerly HK, Chen M, Trotter TN, Hartman ZC. Vaccination Against Androgen Receptor Splice Variants to Immunologically Target Prostate Cancer. Vaccines (Basel). 2024 Nov 13;12(11).

Published In

Vaccines (Basel)

DOI

ISSN

2076-393X

Publication Date

November 13, 2024

Volume

12

Issue

11

Location

Switzerland

Related Subject Headings

  • 3207 Medical microbiology
  • 3204 Immunology
  • 3202 Clinical sciences