Charles A. Nicolette
Genzyme
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Publication
Featured researches published by Charles A. Nicolette.
Journal of Immunology | 2000
Gerald P. Linette; Srinivas Shankara; Simonne Longerich; Sixun Yang; Rhonda Doll; Charles A. Nicolette; Frederic I. Preffer; Bruce L. Roberts; Frank G. Haluska
Replication-deficient recombinant adenovirus (Ad) encoding human gp100 or MART-1 melanoma Ag was used to transduce human dendritic cells (DC) ex vivo as a model system for cancer vaccine therapy. A second generation E1/E4 region deleted Ad which harbors the CMV immediate-early promoter/enhancer and a unique E4-ORF6/pIX chimeric gene was employed as the backbone vector. We demonstrate that human monocyte-derived DC are permissive to Ad infection at multiplicity of infection between 100 and 500 and occurs independent of the coxsackie Ad receptor. Fluorescent-labeled Ad was used to assess the kinetics and distribution of viral vector within DC. Ad-transduced DC show peak transgene expression at 24–48 h and expression remains detectable for at least 7 days. DC transduced with replication-deficient Ad do not exhibit any unusual phenotypic characteristics or cytopathic effects. DC transduced with Ad2/gp100v2 can elicit tumor-specific CTL in vitro from patients bearing gp100+ metastatic melanoma. Using a panel of gp100-derived synthetic peptides, we show that Ad2/gp100v2-transduced DC elicit Ag-specific CTL that recognize only the G209 and G280 epitopes, both of which display relatively short half-lives (∼7–8 h) on the surface of HLA-A*0201+ cells. Thus, patients with metastatic melanoma are not tolerant to gp100 Ag based on the detection of CD8+ T cells specific for multiple HLA-A*0201-restricted, gp100-derived epitopes.
Drug Discovery Today | 2003
Charles A. Nicolette; Glenn Miller
The history of tumor biomarker discovery has been one of limited success. Population based screens are few and of limited clinical usefulness. Biomarkers that are able to segregate patients by diagnosis, prognosis and appropriate therapeutic selection are in great need and will be the basis of the clinical management in the future. This review sets out the challenges inherent in the field of tumor biomarker discovery and the tools that we are using to meet that challenge. It is now possible, using this suite of technologies, to discuss novel tumor biomarkers in terms of a pipeline rather than single unique events in research. The future of clinical oncology management will use markers such as those being identified via these techniques to improve patient care through better diagnosis and hopefully to achieve greater success in treatment by exploiting tumor markers as therapeutic targets.
Journal of Immunology | 2002
Carla Lawendowski; Gina M. Giurleo; Yin Yin Huang; G. Joseph Franklin; Johanne Kaplan; Bruce L. Roberts; Charles A. Nicolette
Self tolerance to MHC class I-restricted nonmutated self Ags is a significant hurdle to effective cancer immunotherapy. Compelling evidence is emerging that altered peptide ligands can be far more immunogenic than their corresponding native epitopes; however, there is no way to reliably predict which modifications will lead to enhanced native epitope-specific immune responses. We reasoned that this limitation could be overcome by devising an empirical screen in which the nearly complete combinatorial spectrum of peptides of optimal length can be rapidly assayed for reactivity with a MHC class I-restricted cytotoxic T cell clone. This method, solid-phase epitope recovery, quantitatively ranks all reactive peptides in the library and allows selection of altered peptide ligands having desirable immunogenic properties of interest. In contrast to rationally designed MHC anchor-modified peptides, peptides identified by the present method are highly substituted in predicted TCR contact residues and can reliably activate and expand effector cell populations in vitro which lyse target cells presenting the wild-type epitope. We demonstrate that solid-phase epitope recovery peptides corresponding to a poorly immunogenic epitope of the melanoma Ag, gp100, can reliably induce wild-type peptide-specific CTL using normal donor T cells in vitro. Furthermore, these peptides can complement one another to induce these responses in an overwhelming majority of normal individuals in vitro. These data provide a rationale for the design of superior vaccines comprising a mixture of structurally diverse yet functionally convergent peptides.
Archive | 1997
Charles A. Nicolette
Archive | 2001
Bruce L. Roberts; Srinivas Shankara; Charles A. Nicolette
Archive | 2007
Charles A. Nicolette; Bruce L. Roberts; Jianlin Gong; Donald Kufe
Archive | 1999
Charles A. Nicolette
Molecular Therapy | 2000
Abraham Scaria; Jennifer Sullivan; Judith A. St. George; Johanne Kaplan; Michael Lukason; James E. Morris; Malinda S. Plog; Charles A. Nicolette; Richard J. Gregory; Samuel C. Wadsworth
Archive | 2002
Charles A. Nicolette
Archive | 2001
Charles A. Nicolette