Exosomes as Potent Cell-Free Peptide-Based Vaccine. I. Dendritic Cell-Derived Exosomes Transfer Functional MHC Class I/Peptide Complexes to Dendritic Cells

Fabrice André(Inserm), Nathalie Chaput(Inserm), Noël E.C. Schartz(Inserm), Caroline Flament(Inserm), N. Aubert(Institut Jean Godinot), Jacky Bernard(Institut Jean Godinot), François A. Lemonnier(Institut Pasteur), Graça Raposo(Centre National pour la Recherche Scientifique et Technique (CNRST)), Bernard Escudier(Inserm), Di‐Hwei Hsu(ATUM (United States)), Thomas Tursz(Inserm), Sebastián Amigorena(Inserm), Eric Angevin(Inserm), Laurence Zitvogel(Inserm)
The Journal of Immunology
February 1, 2004
Cited by 490

Abstract

Current immunization protocols in cancer patients involve CTL-defined tumor peptides. Mature dendritic cells (DC) are the most potent APCs for the priming of naive CD8(+) T cells, eventually leading to tumor eradication. Because DC can secrete MHC class I-bearing exosomes, we addressed whether exosomes pulsed with synthetic peptides could subserve the DC function consisting in MHC class I-restricted, peptide-specific CTL priming in vitro and in vivo. The priming of CTL restricted by HLA-A2 molecules and specific for melanoma peptides was performed: 1) using in vitro stimulations of total blood lymphocytes with autologous DC pulsed with GMP-manufactured autologous exosomes in a series of normal volunteers; 2) in HLA-A2 transgenic mice (HHD2) using exosomes harboring functional HLA-A2/Mart1 peptide complexes. In this study, we show that: 1). DC release abundant MHC class I/peptide complexes transferred within exosomes to other naive DC for efficient CD8(+) T cell priming in vitro; 2). exosomes require nature's adjuvants (mature DC) to efficiently promote the differentiation of melanoma-specific effector T lymphocytes producing IFN-gamma (Tc1) effector lymphocytes in HLA-A2 transgenic mice (HHD2). These data imply that exosomes might be a transfer mechanism of functional MHC class I/peptide complexes to DC for efficient CTL activation in vivo.


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