Vaccine Design pp 529-545 | Cite as

Construction and Immunogenicity Testing of Whole Recombinant Yeast-Based T-Cell Vaccines

  • Thomas H. King
  • Zhimin Guo
  • Melanie Hermreck
  • Donald Bellgrau
  • Timothy C. Rodell
Part of the Methods in Molecular Biology book series (MIMB, volume 1404)

Abstract

GlobeImmune’s Tarmogen® immunotherapy platform utilizes recombinant Saccharomyces cerevisiae yeast as a vaccine vector to deliver heterologous antigens for activation of disease-specific, targeted cellular immunity. The vaccines elicit immune-mediated killing of target cells expressing viral and cancer antigens in vivo via a CD8+ CTL-mediated mechanism. Tarmogens are not neutralized by host immune responses and can be administered repeatedly to boost antigen-specific immunity. Production of the vaccines yields stable off-the-shelf products that avoid the need for patient-specific manufacturing found with other immunotherapeutic approaches. Tarmogens for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B and C and various cancers were well tolerated and immunogenic in phase 1 and 2 clinical trials encompassing >600 subjects. The platform is being widely utilized in basic vaccine research and the most rapid path to success in these endeavors follows from optimal immunoassay selection and execution. This chapter provides detailed methods for the construction and preclinical immunogenicity testing of yeast-based immunotherapeutic products to support the rapid and efficient use of this versatile technology.

Keywords

Tarmogen® Recombinant yeast Cellular immunity CD8 T cells CD4 T cells Th17 cells Immunotherapy Therapeutic vaccine 

Notes

Acknowledgements

We thank Kirk Christoffersen and Dr. Angela Sebor for critical review of the manuscript.

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Copyright information

© Springer Science+Business Media New York 2016

Authors and Affiliations

  • Thomas H. King
    • 1
  • Zhimin Guo
    • 1
  • Melanie Hermreck
    • 1
  • Donald Bellgrau
    • 1
    • 2
  • Timothy C. Rodell
    • 1
  1. 1.GlobeImmune, Inc.LouisvilleUSA
  2. 2.Integrated Department of ImmunologyUniversity of Colorado School of MedicineAuroraUSA

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