Alison Merrick
St James's University Hospital
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Publication
Featured researches published by Alison Merrick.
Gene Therapy | 2008
C L White; K R Twigger; L. Vidal; J. S. De Bono; Matt Coffey; Lucy Heinemann; Ruth Morgan; Alison Merrick; Fiona Errington; Richard G. Vile; Alan Melcher; Hardev Pandha; Kevin J. Harrington
There is an emerging realization from animal models that the immune response may have both detrimental and beneficial therapeutic effects during cancer virotherapy. However, there is a dearth of clinical data on the immune response to viral agents in patients. During a recently completed phase I trial of intravenous reovirus type 3 Dearing (RT3D), heavily pretreated patients with advanced cancers received RT3D at doses escalating from 1 × 108 tissue culture infectious dose-50 (TCID50) on day 1 to 3 × 1010 TCID50 on 5 consecutive days of a 4 weekly cycle. A detailed analysis of the immune effects was conducted by collecting serial clinical samples for analysis of neutralizing anti-reoviral antibodies (NARA), peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) and cytokines. Significant increases in NARA were seen with peak endpoint titres >1/10 000 in all but one patient. The median fold increase was 250, with a range of 9–6437. PBMC subset analysis showed marked heterogeneity. At baseline, CD3+CD4+ T cells were reduced in most patients, but after RT3D therapy their numbers increased in 47.6% of patients. In contrast, most patients had high baseline CD3+CD8+ T-cell levels, with 33% showing incremental increases after therapy. In some patients, there was increased cytotoxic T-cell activation post-therapy, as shown by increased CD8+perforin/granzyme+ T-cell numbers. Most patients had high numbers of circulating CD3−CD56+ NK cells before therapy and in 28.6% this increased with treatment. Regulatory (CD3+CD4+CD25+) T cells were largely unaffected by the therapy. Combined Th1 and Th2 cytokine expression increased in 38% of patients. These data confirm that even heavily pretreated patients are capable of mounting dynamic immune responses during treatment with RT3D, although these responses are not clearly related to the administered virus dose. These data will provide the basis for future studies aiming to modulate the immune response during virotherapy.
Science Translational Medicine | 2012
R. A. Adair; Roulstone; Karen Scott; Ruth Morgan; Gerard J. Nuovo; M Fuller; Debbie Beirne; Emma West; V. A Jennings; Ailsa Rose; Joan Kyula; Sheila Fraser; R. Dave; D. A Anthoney; Alison Merrick; Robin Prestwich; A Aldouri; Oliver Donnelly; Hardev Pandha; Matt Coffey; Peter Selby; Richard Vile; G. J. Toogood; Kevin J. Harrington; Alan Melcher
Oncolytic reovirus is carried by cells to tumors and protected from neutralizing antibodies in the circulation. Therapeutic Virus Hide-and-Seek Oncolytic viruses (OVs) selectively kill cancer cells by direct lysis as well as by stimulating an antitumor immune response. However, the lack of a method for widespread delivery of OVs to tumor cells hangs like an enthusiasm-squelching dark cloud over the field. Direct intratumoral injection is an option but limits this therapy to easily accessible tumors. Mouse studies suggest that the intravenous route would be blocked by preexisting neutralizing antibodies to the virus—the fast immune response that prevents recurrent infection would block the virus from getting to the tumor. Adair et al. now show in human patients with colorectal cancer that, after intravenous injection, reovirus can be escorted to the tumor by immune cells, which protect it from neutralizing antibodies in the plasma. The authors performed a window-of-opportunity clinical trial in 10 colorectal cancer patients scheduled to have surgery to remove liver metastases. Before the planned surgery, the patients were injected with oncolytic reovirus. Replication-competent cytotoxic reovirus was recovered from blood cells, but not from plasma taken from these patients, and reovirus protein was identified preferentially in malignant cells compared with nonmalignant liver tissue from surgical specimens. These data suggest that in contrast to observations in mice, human immune cells may shield reovirus from neutralizing antibodies and deliver the oncolytic reovirus to tumors in patients. Although the mechanism behind the delivery process and the efficacy of the OVs remain to be determined, these potentially cloud-lifting studies support intravenous administration of reovirus for cancer therapy. Oncolytic viruses, which preferentially lyse cancer cells and stimulate an antitumor immune response, represent a promising approach to the treatment of cancer. However, how they evade the antiviral immune response and their selective delivery to, and replication in, tumor over normal tissue has not been investigated in humans. Here, we treated patients with a single cycle of intravenous reovirus before planned surgery to resect colorectal cancer metastases in the liver. Tracking the viral genome in the circulation showed that reovirus could be detected in plasma and blood mononuclear, granulocyte, and platelet cell compartments after infusion. Despite the presence of neutralizing antibodies before viral infusion in all patients, replication-competent reovirus that retained cytotoxicity was recovered from blood cells but not plasma, suggesting that transport by cells could protect virus for potential delivery to tumors. Analysis of surgical specimens demonstrated greater, preferential expression of reovirus protein in malignant cells compared to either tumor stroma or surrounding normal liver tissue. There was evidence of viral factories within tumor, and recovery of replicating virus from tumor (but not normal liver) was achieved in all four patients from whom fresh tissue was available. Hence, reovirus could be protected from neutralizing antibodies after systemic administration by immune cell carriage, which delivered reovirus to tumor. These findings suggest new preclinical and clinical scheduling and treatment combination strategies to enhance in vivo immune evasion and effective intravenous delivery of oncolytic viruses to patients in vivo.
British Journal of Cancer | 2005
Alison Merrick; Fiona Errington; K Milward; Dearbhaile M. O'Donnell; Kevin J. Harrington; Adrian C Bateman; Hardev Pandha; Richard G. Vile; Ewan E. Morrison; Peter Selby; Alan Melcher
Dendritic cells (DC) are professional antigen-presenting cells (APC) of the immune system, uniquely able to prime naïve T-cell responses. They are the focus of a range of novel strategies for the immunotherapy of cancer, a proportion of which include treating DC with ionising radiation to high dose. The effects of radiation on DC have not, however, been fully characterised. We therefore cultured human myeloid DC from CD14+ precursors, and studied the effects of ionising radiation on their phenotype and function. Dendritic cells were remarkably resistant against radiation-induced apoptosis, showed limited changes in surface phenotype, and mostly maintained their endocytic, phagocytic and migratory capacity. However, irradiated DC were less effective in a mixed lymphocyte reaction, and on maturation produced significantly less IL-12 than unirradiated controls, while IL-10 secretion was maintained. Furthermore, peptide-pulsed irradiated mature DC were less effective at naïve T-cell priming, stimulating fewer effector cells with lower cytotoxicity against antigen-specific targets. Hence irradiation of DC in vitro, and potentially in vivo, has a significant impact on their function, and may shift the balance between T-cell activation and tolerisation in DC-mediated immune responses.
Journal of Immunotherapy | 2008
Paul Hatfield; Alison Merrick; Emma West; Dearbhaile M. O'Donnell; Peter Selby; Richard G. Vile; Alan Melcher
The immune response to cancer is critically determined by the way in which tumor cells die. As necrotic, stress-associated death can be associated with activation of antitumor immunity, whole tumor cell antigen loading strategies for dendritic cell (DC)-based vaccination have commonly used freeze-thaw “necrotic” lysates as an immunogenic source of tumor-associated antigens. In this study, the effect of such lysates on the ability of DCs to mature in response to well-established maturation stimuli was examined, and methods to enhance lysate-induced DC activation explored. Freeze-thaw lysates were prepared from murine tumor cell lines and their effects on bone marrow-derived DC maturation and function examined. Unmodified freeze-thaw tumor cell lysates inhibited the toll-like receptor-induced maturation and function of bone marrow-derived DCs, preventing up-regulation of CD40, CD86, and major histocompatibility complex class II, and reducing secretion of inflammatory cytokines [interleukin (IL)-12 p70, tumor necrosis factor-α, and IL-6]. Although IL-10 secretion was increased by lysate-pulsed DCs, this was not responsible for the observed suppression of IL-12. Although activation of the nuclear factor-κB pathway remained intact, the kinase activity of phosphorylated p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase was inhibited in lysate-pulsed DCs. Lysate-induced DC suppression was partially reversed in vitro by induction of tumor cell stress before lysis, and only DCs loaded with stressed lysates afforded protection against tumor challenge in vivo. These data suggest that ex vivo freeze-thaw of tumor cells does not effectively mimic in vivo immunogenic necrosis, and advocates careful characterization and optimization of tumor cell-derived vaccine sources for cancer immunotherapy.
Gene Therapy | 2006
Fiona Errington; J. Jones; Alison Merrick; Adrian C Bateman; Kevin J. Harrington; Michael J. Gough; Dearbhaile M. O'Donnell; Peter Selby; Richard G. Vile; Alan Melcher
Fusogenic membrane glycoproteins (FMG) are a family of viral genes that, when expressed in tumour cells, trigger extensive cell to cell fusion and subsequent cell death. Gene therapy approaches using FMG are also potentially immunogenic, since syncitia generated ex vivo can be therapeutic as antitumour vaccines in murine models. This study has addressed the mechanisms responsible for the immunogenicity of FMG-mediated cell death, and its applicability to human immune priming. We show that fusion of human Mel888 melanoma cells following transfection with FMG can reverse the suppressive effects of Mel888 on dendritic cells (DC) phenotype, and potentiate IL-12 production by DC on activation in a cell contact-dependent manner. DC loaded with fusing, but not intact, tumour cells primed a naive, tumour-specific cytotoxic T-cell response, which was MHC class I-restricted and associated with production of high levels of IFNγ and, later, IL-5. Fusing cells were an effective source of antigen for DC cross-priming and presentation of the melanoma-specific antigen gp100 to a specific T-cell clone. These data show, in a human system, that FMG represent an immunogenic, as well as cytotoxic, gene therapy for cancer, reversing the inhibitory effects of tumour cells on DC to potentiate IL-12 production and naive T-cell priming.
International Journal of Cancer | 2007
Nikolaos T. Georgopoulos; Alison Merrick; Nigel Scott; Peter Selby; Alan Melcher; Ludwik K. Trejdosiewicz
CD40, a member of the tumour necrosis factor family, is expressed in a variety of epithelial cells. Although soluble CD40 agonists are growth‐inhibitory, membrane‐presented CD40 ligand (CD40L) induces extensive apoptosis in carcinoma cells. This study investigated whether CD40 is expressed in human colorectal carcinoma (CRC) cells and explored the functional consequences of CD40 ligation. CD40 expression in a panel of CRC lines was assessed by flow cytometry and in resected human CRCs by immunohistochemistry. CRC cells were treated in vitro with soluble CD40 agonists or cocultured with fibroblasts expressing membrane‐bound CD40 ligand. Apoptosis was determined by flow cytometry using Annexin V/propidium iodide labelling and by a DNA fragmentation assay. Cytokine secretion induced by CD40 ligation was quantified by a multiplex‐bead array approach. We show that CD40 is expressed in a proportion of established CRC lines in culture and that receptor expression is functional. Activation of CD40 by membrane‐presented CD40L, but not soluble agonists, causes high levels of death in CD40‐positive CRC cells and induces secretion of proinflammatory cytokines. In agreement with our in vitro observations, immunohistochemical studies demonstrated that CD40 is highly expressed in a proportion of colorectal cancer specimens. The high level of susceptibility of CRC cells to CD40‐killing combined with the ability of CD40 to induce concomitant secretion of proinflammatory cytokines suggest that CD40 ligation may represent a novel mechanism for elimination of CRC cells and render CD40 a promising therapeutic target for the eradication of colorectal tumours.
Clinical Cancer Research | 2006
Fiona Errington; Andrew Bateman; Tim Kottke; Jill Thompson; Kevin J. Harrington; Alison Merrick; Paul Hatfield; Peter Selby; Richard G. Vile; Alan Melcher
PURPOSE: Fusogenic membrane glycoproteins (FMG), such as the vesicular stomatitis virus G glycoprotein (VSV-G), represent a new class of gene therapy for cancer that cause cytotoxic fusion on expression in tumor cells. In addition, FMG-mediated tumor cell death stimulates antitumor immunity, suggesting potential applications for FMG-expressing cellular vaccines. This study addresses the promise of FMG-expressing allogeneic tumor cells, which are most practical for clinical use, as a novel platform for ex vivo and in situ vaccination. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Murine B16 melanoma-derived cell lines expressing autologous or allogeneic MHC class I, expressing fusogenic or nonfusogenic VSV-G, were used to vaccinate mice in vivo against a live tumor challenge. Exosome-like vesicles released by fusing allogeneic cells (syncitiosomes) and intratumoral injection of fusing vaccines were also tested as novel therapeutic strategies for their antitumor effects. RESULTS: Expression of fusogenic VSV-G enhanced the immunogenicity of an allogeneic cellular vaccine, which was more effective than a fusing autologous vaccine. Allogeneic syncitiosomes were only as effective as cellular vaccines when administered with adjuvant, demonstrating that syncitiosomes cannot account entirely for the mechanism of immune priming. Intratumoral injection of FMG-expressing allogeneic cells led to significant tumor regression using both fusogenic or nonfusogenic VSV-G. However, specific priming against tumor-associated antigenic epitopes and protection against secondary rechallenge only occurred if the initial vaccine was competent for cell fusion. CONCLUSIONS: FMG-expressing allogeneic tumor cells are a potent source of antitumor vaccines. Syncitiosomes given with adjuvant and intratumoral injection of fusing cells represent novel strategies well-suited to clinical translation.
Journal of Immunology | 2008
Katy S. Hill; Fiona Errington; Lynette Steele; Alison Merrick; Ruth Morgan; Peter Selby; Nikolaos T. Georgopoulos; Dearbhaile M. O'Donnell; Alan Melcher
In vivo, dendritic cells (DC) are programmed to orchestrate innate and adaptive immunity in response to pathogen-derived “danger” signals. Under particular circumstances, DC can also be directly cytotoxic against tumor cells, potentially allowing them to release tumor associated Ags from dying cells and then prime antitumor immunity against them. In this study, we describe the innate characteristics of DC (OK-DC) generated in vitro after exposure of immature human myeloid-derived DC to OK432, a penicillin-inactivated and lyophilized preparation of Streptococcus pyrogenes. OK-DC produced proinflammatory cytokines, stimulated autologous T cell proliferation and IFN-γ secretion, expressed CCR7, and migrated in response to MIP-3β. Moreover, OK-DC displayed strong, specific cytotoxicity toward tumor cell targets. This cytotoxicity was associated with novel, OK432-induced up-regulation of CD40L on the cell surface of OK-DC, and was absolutely dependent on expression of CD40 on the tumor targets. These data demonstrate that maturation of human DC with OK432, an adjuvant suitable for clinical use, induces direct tumor cell killing by DC, and describes a novel CD40/CD40L-mediated mechanism for specific DC antitumor cytotoxicity.
Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | 2008
Alison Merrick; Rosa Maria Diaz; Dearbhaile M. O'Donnell; Peter Selby; Richard Vile; Alan Melcher
BackgroundDendritic cells (DC) pulsed with MHC class I-restricted tumour associated antigen (TAA) peptides have been widely tested in pre-clinical models and early clinical studies for their ability to prime cytotoxic T cell (CTL) responses. The effect of co-expression of allogeneic MHC antigens on DC immunogenicity has not been addressed, and has implications for the feasibility of clinical applications.Objective This study compared DC from autologous H-2b or semi-allogeneic F1 H-2bxk mice pulsed with the H-2b-restricted model ovalbumin (OVA) peptide SIINFEKL, and compared in vitro and in vivo their ability to (i) activate specific OT1 cells, (ii) prime naïve CTL, and (iii) protect against B16.OVA challenge. Peptide-pulsed autologous and allogeneic DC were also tested in naïve human CTL priming assays.Results Semi-allogeneic DC expressed higher levels of co-stimulatory molecules. On pulsing with SIINFEKL they triggered greater proliferation of OT1 cells in vitro and in vivo, but were less effective at naïve CTL priming and tumour protection. Autologous human DC were similarly more potent at naïve CTL priming against the melanoma-associated TAA MART-1 in vitro.ConclusionThe expression of allogeneic MHC antigens on peptide-pulsed DC impairs naïve CTL priming and anti-tumour effects, despite effective TAA presentation both in vitro and in vivo.
Journal of Immunotherapy | 2009
Emma West; Ruth Morgan; Karen Scott; Alison Merrick; Anatole Lubenko; David Pawson; Peter Selby; Paul Hatfield; Robin Prestwich; Sheila Fraser; David Eves; Alan Anthoney; Chris Twelves; Debbie Beirne; Poulam M. Patel; Dearbhaile M. O'Donnell; Suzanne M. Watt; Michael Waller; Allan B. Dietz; Philip A. Robinson; Alan Melcher
Dendritic cells (DC) are under intense preclinical and early clinical evaluation for the immunotherapy of cancer. However, the optimal culture conditions and route of delivery for DC vaccination have not been established. Here we describe the first human application of DC matured with the bacterial agent OK432 (OK-DC), using a short-term serum-free culture protocol, which generates mature DC from CD14+ precursors after 5 days. These cells were prepared within the framework of a National Blood Service facility, demonstrating that DC represent a product which is potentially deliverable alongside current standardized cell therapies within the UK National Health Service. In vitro analysis confirmed that OK-DC were mature, secreted tumor necrosis factor-α, interleukin-6, and interleukin-12, and stimulated both T cell and natural killer cell function. To explore effective delivery of OK-DC to lymph nodes, we performed an initial clinical tracking study of radioactively labeled, unpulsed OK-DC after intralymphatic injection into the dorsum of the foot. We showed that injected DC rapidly localized to ipsilateral pelvic lymph nodes, but did not disseminate to more distant nodes over a 48-hour period. There was no significant toxicity associated with OK-DC delivery. These results show that OK-DC are suitable for clinical use, and that intralymphatic delivery is feasible for localizing cells to sites where optimal priming of innate and adaptive antitumor immunity is likely to occur.