Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Linda Gritz is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Linda Gritz.


Vaccine | 1999

The use of combination vaccinia vaccines and dual-gene vaccinia vaccines to enhance antigen-specific T-cell immunity via T-cell costimulation

R.M Kalus; Judy Kantor; Linda Gritz; A.Gómez Yafal; Gail P. Mazzara; Jeffrey Schlom; James W. Hodge

Several recombinant vaccinia viruses are currently being evaluated to induce antigen-specific immunity to a variety of infectious disease agents and tumor associated antigens. T-cell costimulation is extremely important in enhancing T-cell responses, and recombinant vaccines have now been shown to be effective vectors to express a range of these molecules. Both combination vaccines (an admixture of a recombinant vaccinia virus expressing a specific target antigen and a recombinant vaccinia virus expressing a costimulatory molecule) and dual-gene vaccines expressing both transgenes on the same vector have been shown capable of effectively enhancing antigen-specific responses via T-cell costimulation. In this report, we compare for the first time the use of both types of approaches to enhance antigen-specific T-cell responses, and we demonstrate the importance of route of vaccine administration and vaccine dose in attaining optimal T-cell responses. These studies should have direct bearing on the design of vaccine clinical trials for infectious agents and/or tumor associated antigens, in which T-cell costimulatory molecules will be employed to enhance antigen-specific T-cell responses via the use of either combination or dual-gene vaccinia vaccines.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2006

Evaluation of Prime/Boost Regimens Using Recombinant Poxvirus/Tyrosinase Vaccines for the Treatment of Patients with Metastatic Melanoma

Kimberly R. Lindsey; Linda Gritz; Richard M. Sherry; Andrea Abati; Patricia Fetsch; Lisa C. Goldfeder; Monica Gonzales; Kimberly Zinnack; Linda Rogers-Freezer; Leah R. Haworth; Sharon A. Mavroukakis; Donald E. White; Seth M. Steinberg; Nicholas P. Restifo; Dennis Panicali; Steven A. Rosenberg; Suzanne L. Topalian

Purpose: Two clinical trials were conducted to evaluate the clinical efficacy and immunologic impact of vaccination against the tyrosinase protein plus systemic interleukin 2 (IL-2) administration in patients with advanced metastatic melanoma. Experimental Design: Full-length tyrosinase was employed as an immunogen to induce diverse immunologic responses against a commonly expressed melanoma antigen. Heterologous prime/boost vaccination with recombinant vaccinia and fowlpox vectors encoding tyrosinase was first explored in a randomized three-arm phase II trial, in which vaccines were administered alone or concurrently with low-dose or high-dose IL-2. In a subsequent single cohort phase II trial, all patients received the same vaccines and high-dose IL-2 sequentially rather than concurrently. Results: Among a total of 64 patients treated on these trials, 8 objective partial responses (12.5%) were observed, all in patients receiving high-dose IL-2. Additional patients showed evidence of lesional regression (mixed tumor response) or overall regression that did not achieve partial response status (minor response). In vitro evidence of enhanced immunity against tyrosinase following protocol treatments was documented in 3 of 49 (6%) patients tested serologically, 3 of 23 (13%) patients tested for T-cell recognition of individual tyrosinase peptides, and 4 of 16 (25%) patients tested for T-cell recognition of full-length tyrosinase protein with real-time reverse transcription-PCR techniques. Conclusions: Whereas prime/boost immunization with recombinant vaccinia and fowlpox viruses enhanced antityrosinase immunity in some patients with metastatic melanoma, it was ineffective alone in mediating clinical benefit, and in combination with IL-2 did not mediate clinical benefit significantly different from that expected from treatment with IL-2 alone.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2005

Analyses of Recombinant Vaccinia and Fowlpox Vaccine Vectors Expressing Transgenes for Two Human Tumor Antigens and Three Human Costimulatory Molecules

Kwong Y. Tsang; Claudia Palena; Junko Yokokawa; Philip M. Arlen; James L. Gulley; Gail P. Mazzara; Linda Gritz; Alicia Gómez Yafal; Sandra Ogueta; Patricia Greenhalgh; Kelledy Manson; Dennis Panicali; Jeffrey Schlom

Purpose: The poor immunogenicity of tumor antigens and the antigenic heterogeneity of tumors call for vaccine strategies to enhance T-cell responses to multiple antigens. Two antigens expressed noncoordinately on most human carcinomas are carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) and MUC-1. We report here the construction and characterization of two viral vector vaccines to address these issues. Experimental Design: The two viral vectors analyzed are the replication-competent recombinant vaccinia virus (rV-) and the avipox vector, fowlpox (rF-), which is replication incompetent in mammalian cells. Each vector encodes the transgenes for three human costimulatory molecules (B7-1, ICAM-1, and LFA-3, designated TRICOM) and the CEA and MUC-1 transgenes (which also contain agonist epitopes). The vectors are designated rV-CEA/MUC/TRICOM and rF-CEA/MUC/TRICOM. Results: Each of the vectors is shown to be capable of faithfully expressing all five transgenes in human dendritic cells (DC). DCs infected with either vector are shown to activate both CEA- and MUC-1–specific T-cell lines to the same level as DCs infected with CEA-TRICOM or MUC-1-TRICOM vectors. Thus, no evidence of antigenic competition between CEA and MUC-1 was observed. Human DCs infected with rV-CEA/MUC/TRICOM or rF-CEA/MUC/TRICOM are also shown to be capable of generating both MUC-1- and CEA-specific T-cell lines; these T-cell lines are in turn shown to be capable of lysing targets pulsed with MUC-1 or CEA peptides as well as human tumor cells endogenously expressing MUC-1 and/or CEA. Conclusion: These studies provide the rationale for the clinical evaluation of these multigene vectors in patients with a range of carcinomas expressing MUC-1 and/or CEA.


Annals of Surgical Oncology | 1998

Use of recombinant poxviruses to stimulate anti-melanoma T cell reactivity

Christina J. Kim; Janice N. Cormier; Matthew Roden; Linda Gritz; Gail P. Mazzara; Patricia Fetsch; Yasmine M. Hijazi; Kang Hun Lee; Steven A. Rosenberg; Francesco M. Marincola

AbstractBackground: Dendritic cells (DC) are potent professional antigen-presenting cells that can activate naive T lymphocytes and initiate cellular immune responses. As adjuvants, DC may be useful for enhancing immunogenicity and mediating tumor regression. Endogenous expression of antigen by DC could offer the potential advantage of allowing prolonged constitutive presentation of endogenously processed epitopes and exploitation of multiple restriction elements for the presentation of the same antigen. Methods: DC were prepared from the peripheral blood of HLA A*0201 patients with metastatic melanoma in the presence of IL-4 (1000 IU/mL) and GMCSF (1000 IU/mL). Recombinant vaccinia and fowlpox viruses encoding the hMART-1 gene were constructed and used to infect DC. The efficiency of infection and expression of the MART-1 antigen were assessed by immunohistochemistry and intracellular FACS analyses. Cytotoxic lymphocytes (CTL) were generated by the stimulation of CD8+ T cells, with DC expressing the recombinant gene. Reactivity of the CTL was determined at weeks 1 and 2 by the amount of IFN-γ released. Results: DC were infected with recombinant poxviruses and demonstrated specific melanoma antigen expression by immunohistochemistry, immunofluorescence, and intracellular FACS analysis. The expression by DC of MART-1 MAA after viral infection was sufficient to generate CD8+ T lymphocytes that recognized naturally processed epitopes on tumor cells in 10 of 11 patients. Conclusions: Human DC are receptive to infection by recombinant poxviruses encoding MAA genes and are capable of efficiently processing and presenting these MAA to cytotoxic T cells. The potential advantage of this approach is the ability to present specific antigen independent of the identification of the epitope or the MHC restriction element. This strategy may be useful for the identification of relevant epitopes for a diverse number of HLA alleles and for active immunization in patients.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Role of genes that modulate host immune responses in the immunogenicity and pathogenicity of vaccinia virus.

Shawn S. Jackson; Petr O. Ilyinskii; Valerie Philippon; Linda Gritz; Alicia Gómez Yafal; Kimberly Zinnack; Kristin Beaudry; Kelledy Manson; Michelle A. Lifton; Marcelo J. Kuroda; Norman L. Letvin; Gail P. Mazzara; Dennis Panicali

ABSTRACT Poxvirus vaccine vectors, although capable of eliciting potent immune responses, pose serious health risks in immunosuppressed individuals. We therefore constructed five novel recombinant vaccinia virus vectors which contained overlapping deletions of coding regions for the B5R, B8R, B12R, B13R, B14R, B16R, B18R, and B19R immunomodulatory gene products and assessed them for both immunogenicity and pathogenicity. All five of these novel vectors elicited both cellular and humoral immunity to the inserted HIV-BH10 env comparable to that induced by the parental Wyeth strain vaccinia virus. However, deletion of these immunomodulatory genes did not increase the immunogenicity of these vectors compared with the parental vaccinia virus. Furthermore, four of these vectors were slightly less virulent and one was slightly more virulent than the Wyeth strain virus in neonatal mice. Attenuated poxviruses have potential use as safer alternatives to current replication-competent vaccinia virus. Improved vaccinia virus vectors can be generated by deleting additional genes to achieve a more significant viral attenuation.


Cellular Immunology | 2003

A recombinant vector expressing transgenes for four T-cell costimulatory molecules (OX40L, B7-1, ICAM-1, LFA-3) induces sustained CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell activation, protection from apoptosis, and enhanced cytokine production

Douglas W. Grosenbach; Jeffrey Schlom; Linda Gritz; Alicia Gómez Yafal; James W. Hodge

The role of OX40L on the activation of T cells was investigated using poxvirus vectors expressing OX40L alone or in combination with three other T-cell costimulatory molecules: B7-1, ICAM-1, and LFA-3. Poxvirus vector-infected cells were used to stimulate nai;ve or activated CD4(+) and CD8(+) T cells. These studies demonstrate that (a) OX40L plays a role in sustaining the long-term proliferation of CD8(+) T cells in addition to the known effect on CD4(+) T cells following activation, (b) OX40L enhances the production of Th1 cytokines (IL-2, IFN-gamma, and TNF-alpha) from both CD4(+) and CD8(+) while no change in IL-4 expression was observed, and (c) the anti-apoptotic effect of OX40L on T cells is likely the result of sustained expression of anti-apoptotic genes while genes involved in apoptosis are inhibited. In addition, these are the first studies to demonstrate that the combined use of a vector driving the expression of OX40L with three other costimulatory molecules (B7-1, ICAM-1, and LFA-3) both enhances initial activation and then further potentiates sustained activation of nai;ve and effector T cells.


Journal of Virology | 2004

Gender Differences in Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type 1-Specific CD8 Responses in the Reproductive Tract and Colon following Nasal Peptide Priming and Modified Vaccinia Virus Ankara Boosting

James W. Peacock; Sushila K. Nordone; Shawn S. Jackson; Hua-Xin Liao; Norman L. Letvin; Alicia Gómez Yafal; Linda Gritz; Gail P. Mazzara; Barton F. Haynes; Herman F. Staats

ABSTRACT Induction of mucosal anti-human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) T-cell responses in males and females will be important for the development of a successful HIV-1 vaccine. An HIV-1 envelope peptide, DNA plasmid, and recombinant modified vaccinia virus Ankara (rMVA) expressing the H-2Dd-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocyte P18 epitope were used as immunogens to test for their ability to prime and boost anti-HIV-1 T-cell responses at mucosal and systemic sites in BALB/c mice. We found of all prime-boost combinations tested, an HIV-1 Env peptide subunit mucosal prime followed by systemic (intradermal) boosting with rMVA yielded the maximal induction of gamma interferon (IFN-γ) spot-forming cells in the female genital tract and colon. However, this mucosal prime-systemic rMVA boost regimen was minimally immunogenic for the induction of genital, colon, or lung anti-HIV-1 T-cell responses in male mice. We determined that a mucosal Env subunit immunization could optimally prime an rMVA boost in female but not male mice, as determined by the magnitude of antigen-specific IFN-γ responses in the reproductive tracts, colon, and lung. Defective mucosal priming in male mice could not be overcome by multiple mucosal immunizations. However, rMVA priming followed by an rMVA boost was the optimal prime-boost strategy for male mice as determined by the magnitude of antigen-specific IFN-γ responses in the reproductive tract and lung. Thus, prime-boost immunization strategies able to induce mucosal antigen-specific IFN-γ responses were identified for male and female mice. Understanding the cellular and molecular basis of gender-determined immune responses will be important for optimizing induction of anti-HIV-1 mucosal immune responses in both males and females.


Journal of Neuroimmunology | 1997

Inhibition of allergic encephalomyelitis in marmosets by vaccination with recombinant vaccinia virus encoding for myelin basic protein

Claude P. Genain; Linda Gritz; Narendra Joshi; Dennis Panicali; Richard L. Davis; John N. Whitaker; Norman L. Letvin; Stephen L. Hauser

A primary demyelinating form of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE) resembling human multiple sclerosis (MS) occurs in Callithrix jacchus marmosets following immunization with human white matter. Participation of a T-cell immune response against myelin basic protein (MBP) in this disease model is supported by observations of increased reactivity against MBP in PBMC and of adoptive transfer of an inflammatory form of EAE by MBP-reactive T-cells. To evaluate the effects of ectopic presentation of MBP on marmoset EAE, animals were vaccinated prior to induction of EAE by subcutaneous injection of attenuated strains of vaccinia virus genetically engineered to contain either the entire coding sequence for human MBP (vT15) or the equine herpes virus glycoprotein gH gene (vAbT249). Vaccination with vT15 was followed by transient cytoplasmic and surface membrane expression of MBP in circulating PBMC (15-45 days). The onset of clinical EAE after immunization (pi) was markedly delayed in vT15-vaccinated animals (37-97 days pi, n = 4) compared to vAbT249-vaccinated controls (14-18 days pi, n = 3). Proliferative responses against MBP but not against vaccinia antigens or phytohemagglutinin were suppressed in protected animals. Thus, development of attenuated live viruses carrying genes for myelin antigens could be useful for induction of immunologic tolerance and for modulation of autoimmune demyelination.


Clinical Cancer Research | 2000

A Phase I Trial of a Recombinant Vaccinia Virus Expressing Prostate-specific Antigen in Advanced Prostate Cancer

Joseph Paul Eder; Philip W. Kantoff; Kristin Roper; GuangXian Xu; Glenn J. Bubley; John Boyden; Linda Gritz; Gail P. Mazzara; William Oh; Philip M. Arlen; Kwong Y. Tsang; Dennis Panicali; Jeffrey Schlom; Donald Kufe


Cancer Research | 1999

A Triad of Costimulatory Molecules Synergize to Amplify T-Cell Activation

James W. Hodge; Helen Sabzevari; Alicia Gómez Yafal; Linda Gritz; Matthias G.O. Lorenz; Jeffrey Schlom

Collaboration


Dive into the Linda Gritz's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jeffrey Schlom

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

James W. Hodge

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Kwong-Yok Tsang

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Steven A. Rosenberg

National Institutes of Health

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Norman L. Letvin

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge