Sara J. McKee
University of Queensland
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sara J. McKee.
Journal of Controlled Release | 2012
Sara J. McKee; Vivienne L. Young; Fiona Clow; Colin M. Hayman; Margaret A. Baird; Ian F. Hermans; Sarah L. Young; Vernon K. Ward
Virus-like particles (VLP) are effective vehicles for delivery of heterologous antigen to antigen-presenting cells. However VLP alone are insufficiently stimulatory to generate the signals required to facilitate effective priming of naïve T cells. We show that the VLP derived from rabbit hemorrhagic disease virus can bind the galactose-containing adjuvant α-galactosylceramide to form a composite particle for co-delivery of antigen and adjuvant to the same antigen-presenting cell. Vaccination with VLP and α-galactosylceramide activated splenic iNKT cells to produce IFN-γ and IL-4, led to the generation of antigen-specific T cells that protected prophylactically against subcutaneous tumor challenge, and was more effective at generating anti-tumor immune responses than either component individually. These data demonstrate a novel method for immunopotentiating VLP to increase their efficacy in the generation of anti-tumor responses via the innate ligand recognition properties of calicivirus-derived nanoparticles.
PLOS ONE | 2013
Khairunadwa Jemon; Vivienne L. Young; Michelle Wilson; Sara J. McKee; Vernon K. Ward; Margaret A. Baird; Sarah L. Young; Merilyn Hibma
Cervical cancer is caused by high-risk, cancer-causing human papillomaviruses (HPV) and is the second highest cause of cancer deaths in women globally. The majority of cervical cancers express well-characterized HPV oncogenes, which are potential targets for immunotherapeutic vaccination. Here we develop a rabbit haemorrhagic disease virus (RHDV) virus-like particle (VLP)-based vaccine designed for immunotherapy against HPV16 positive tumours. An RHDV-VLP, modified to contain the universal helper T cell epitope PADRE and decorated with an MHC I-restricted peptide (aa 48–57) from the HPV16 E6, was tested for its immunotherapeutic efficacy against the TC-1 HPV16 E6 and E7-expressing tumour in mice. The E6-RHDV-VLP-PADRE was administered therapeutically for the treatment of a pre-existing TC-1 tumour and was delivered with antibodies either to deplete regulatory T cells (anti-CD25) or to block T cell suppression mediated through CTLA-4. As a result, the tumour burden was reduced by around 50% and the median survival time of mice to the humane endpoint was almost doubled the compared to controls. The incorporation of PADRE into the RHDV-VLP was necessary for an E6-specific enhancement of the anti-tumour response and the co-administration of the immune modifying antibodies contributed to the overall efficacy of the immunotherapy. The E6-RHDV-VLP-PADRE shows immunotherapeutic efficacy, prolonging survival for HPV tumour-bearing mice. This was enhanced by the systemic administration of immune-modifying antibodies that are commercially available for use in humans. There is potential to further modify these particles for even greater efficacy in the path to development of an immunotherapeutic treatment for HPV precancerous and cancer stages.
Reviews in Medical Virology | 2015
Sara J. McKee; Anne-Sophie Bergot; Graham R. Leggatt
It has been more than 7 years since the commercial introduction of highly successful vaccines protecting against high‐risk human papillomavirus (HPV) subtypes and the development of cervical cancer. From an immune standpoint, the dependence of cervical cancer on viral infection has meant that HPV proteins can be targeted as strong tumour antigens leading to clearance of the infection and the subsequent protection from cancer. Commercially available vaccines consisting of the L1 capsid protein assembled as virus‐like particles (VLPs) induce neutralising antibodies that deny access of the virus to cervical epithelial cells. While greater than 90% efficacy has been demonstrated at the completion of large phase III trials in young women, vaccine developers are now addressing broader issues such as efficacy in boys, longevity of the protection and inducing cross‐reactive antibody for oncogenic, non‐vaccine HPV strains. For women with existing HPV infection, the prophylactic vaccines provide little protection, and consequently, the need for therapeutic vaccines will continue into the future. Therapeutic vaccines targeting HPVE6 and E7 proteins are actively being pursued with new adjuvants and delivery vectors, combined with an improved knowledge of the tumour microenvironment, showing great promise. This review will focus on recent progress in prophylactic and therapeutic vaccine development and implementation since the publication of end of study data from phase III clinical trials between 2010 and 2012. Copyright
Molecular Cancer Therapeutics | 2015
Brian Gabrielli; Fawzi Bokhari; Max V. Ranall; Zay Yar Oo; Alexander J. Stevenson; Weili Wang; Melanie Murrell; Mushfiq H. Shaikh; Sora Fallaha; Daniel Clarke; Madison Kelly; Karin A Sedelies; Melinda E. Christensen; Sara J. McKee; Graham R. Leggatt; Paul Leo; Dubravka Škalamera; H. Peter Soyer; Thomas J. Gonda; Nigel A.J. McMillan
Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the causative agent in cervical cancer. HPV oncogenes are major drivers of the transformed phenotype, and the cancers remain addicted to these oncogenes. A screen of the human kinome has identified inhibition of Aurora kinase A (AURKA) as being synthetically lethal on the background of HPV E7 expression. The investigational AURKA inhibitor MLN8237/Alisertib selectively promoted apoptosis in the HPV cancers. The apoptosis was driven by an extended mitotic delay in the Alisertib-treated HPV E7–expressing cells. This had the effect of reducing Mcl-1 levels, which is destabilized in mitosis, and increasing BIM levels, normally destabilized by Aurora A in mitosis. Overexpression of Mcl-1 reduced sensitivity to the drug. The level of HPV E7 expression influenced the extent of Alisertib-induced mitotic delay and Mcl-1 reduction. Xenograft experiments with three cervical cancer cell lines showed Alisertib inhibited growth of HPV and non-HPV xenografts during treatment. Growth of non-HPV tumors was delayed, but in two separate HPV cancer cell lines, regression with no resumption of growth was detected, even at 50 days after treatment. A transgenic model of premalignant disease driven solely by HPV E7 also demonstrated sensitivity to drug treatment. Here, we show for the first time that targeting of the Aurora A kinase in mice using drugs such as Alisertib results in a curative sterilizing therapy that may be useful in treating HPV-driven cancers. Mol Cancer Ther; 14(12); 2753–61. ©2015 AACR.
Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2012
Nina Dickgreber; Kathryn J. Farrand; Nicholas van Panhuys; Deborah A. Knight; Sara J. McKee; Mei L. Chong; Socorro Miranda-Hernandez; Alan G. Baxter; Richard M. Locksley; Graham Le Gros; Ian F. Hermans
We assessed the production of the canonical Th2 cytokine IL‐4 by NKT cells directly in vivo using IL‐4‐substituting strains of reporter mice that provide faithful and sensitive readouts of cytokine production without the confounding effects of in vitro stimulation. Analysis in naïve animals revealed an “innate” phase of IL‐4 secretion that did not need to be triggered by administration of a known NKT cell ligand. This secretion was by immature NKT cells spanning Stage 1 of the maturation process in the thymus (CD4+ CD44lo NK1.1− cells) and Stage 2 (CD4+ CD44hi NK1.1− cells) in the spleen. Like ligand‐induced IL‐4 production by mature cells, this innate activity was independent of an initial source of IL‐4 protein and did not require STAT6 signaling. A more sustained level of innate IL‐4 production was observed in animals on a BALB/c background compared with a C57BL/6 background, suggesting a level of genetic regulation that may contribute to the “Th2‐prone” phenotype in BALB/c animals. These observations indicate a regulated pattern of IL‐4 expression by maturing NKT cells, which may endow these cells with a capacity to influence the development of surrounding cells in the thymus.
Cancer immunology research | 2017
Sara J. McKee; Brianna L. Doff; Megan S.F. Soon; Stephen R. Mattarollo
Treating cancers by combining approaches is thought to hold great promise. This study demonstrates that caution will be necessary in the selection of antibody therapies that target T cells when trying to enhance antitumor efficacy in B-cell lymphoma. Combinations of mAbs that target various components of T-cell activation/inhibition may work synergistically to improve antitumor immunity against cancer. In this study, we investigated the therapeutic potential of combining an anticancer vaccination strategy with antibodies targeting an immune stimulatory (4-1BB) and immune inhibitory (PD-1) receptor, in a preclinical model of spontaneously arising c-Myc–driven B-cell lymphoma. In Eμ-myc transgenic mice, we reveal that 4-1BB agonistic mAb treatment alone was sufficient to drive antitumor immunity and prevent disease progression in 70% of mice. When combined with an α-GalCer–loaded, irradiated tumor cell vaccine, 4-1BB mAb treatment led to increased expansion of effector CD8 T-cell populations and protection of long-term surviving mice against tumor rechallenge. Unexpectedly, PD-1 blockade did not provide therapeutic benefit. The T-cell–promoting effects and antitumor activity of 4-1BB mAb were diminished when used simultaneously with a PD-1–blocking mAb. This was associated with a rapid and dramatic reduction in effector CD8+ T-cell subsets in the presence of PD-1 blockade. These findings reveal that supporting T-cell activation therapeutically is effective for controlling B-cell lymphomas; however, caution is required when combining antibody-mediated modulation of both costimulatory and coinhibitory T-cell receptors. Cancer Immunol Res; 5(3); 191–7. ©2017 AACR.
Journal of Leukocyte Biology | 2014
Sara J. McKee; Stephen R. Mattarollo; Graham R. Leggatt
The skin is a complex immunological niche providing immunity to invading pathogens while simultaneously maintaining tolerance to innocuous environmental antigens. Consistent with this complex response, the skin is resident to both immunosuppressive and effector cell populations whose activities are tightly regulated. While NKT cells can activate immune responses in the skin, this review will highlight studies on UV‐induced photodamage, models of NMSCs, transplantation and allergic inflammation where NKT cells appear to have an immunosuppressive role in the skin.
Immunology and Cell Biology | 2016
Rory Rearden; Amelia Sah; Brianna L. Doff; Takumi Kobayashi; Sara J. McKee; Graham R. Leggatt; Stephen R. Mattarollo
Immunomodulatory therapies can effectively control haematological malignancies by promoting antitumour immunity. Previously, we reported transient growth of poorly immunogenic murine non‐Hodgkin B‐cell lymphomas (B‐NHL) by targeting natural killer T (NKT) cells with a therapeutic vaccine approach. Therapeutic efficacy was highly dependent on the ability of the vaccine to provoke rapid interferon‐gamma (IFNγ) production from NKT and NK cells. By manipulating the capacity of either host or lymphoma cells to signal through the IFNγ receptor (IFNγR), we investigated whether the therapeutic effect conferred by vaccine‐induced IFNγ is a result of immune cell activation, lymphoma IFNγ sensitivity or a combination of both. We demonstrated that antitumour immunity elicited by vaccination requires IFNγ signalling within host cells but not tumour cells. IFNγR‐deficient mice failed to mount an effective antitumour immune response following vaccination despite elevated IFNγ levels. With successive exposure to vaccination, lymphomas acquired an increasingly therapy‐resistant phenotype and displayed a reduction in major histocompatibility complex I and CD1d surface expression, which is independent of tumour intrinsic IFNγ signalling. Our results suggest that immunotherapy‐induced IFNγ production mainly exerts its therapeutic effect via signalling through host cells, rather than directly to tumour cells in B‐NHL. This signifies that intact IFNγ signalling within patients’ immune compartment rather than tumour cell sensitivity to IFNγ is more critical for successful treatment. Finally, tumour IFNγ signalling alone does not drive acquired tumour resistance to vaccination, implying that additional immunoediting pathways are responsible for tumour immune escape.
OncoImmunology | 2018
Sara J. McKee; Zewen K. Tuong; Takumi Kobayashi; Brianna L. Doff; Megan S.F. Soon; Michael Nissen; Pui Yeng Lam; Colm Keane; Frank Vari; Davide Moi; Roberta Mazzieri; Graham R. Leggatt; Maher K. Gandhi; Stephen R. Mattarollo
ABSTRACT Monocytosis is considered a poor prognostic factor for many cancers, including B cell lymphomas. The mechanisms by which different monocyte subsets support the growth of lymphoma is poorly understood. Using a pre-clinical mouse model of B cell non-Hodgkins lymphoma (B-NHL), we investigated the impact of tumor progression on circulating monocyte levels, subset distribution and their activity, with a focus on immune suppression. B-NHL development corresponded with significant expansion initially of classical (Ly6Chi) and non-classical (Ly6Clo) monocytes, with accumulation and eventual predominance of Ly6Clo cells. The lymphoma environment promoted the conversion, preferential survival and immune suppressive activity of Ly6Clo monocytes. Ly6Clo monocytes expressed higher levels of immunosuppressive genes including PD-L1/2, Arg1, IDO1 and CD163, compared to Ly6Chi monocytes. Both monocyte subsets suppressed CD8 T cell proliferation and IFN-γ production in vitro, but via different mechanisms. Ly6Chi monocyte suppression was contact dependent, while Ly6Clo monocytes suppressed via soluble mediators, including IDO and arginase. Ly6Clo monocytes could be selectively depleted in tumor-bearing hosts by liposomal doxorubicin treatment, further enhanced by co-administration of anti-4-1BB monoclonal antibody. This treatment led to a reduction in tumor growth, but failed to improve overall survival. Analogous immunosuppressive monocytes were observed in peripheral blood of diffuse large B cell lymphoma patients and actively suppressed human CD8 T cell proliferation. This study highlights a potential immune evasion strategy deployed by B cell lymphoma involving accumulation of circulating non-classical monocytes with immunosuppressive activity.
Veterinary Immunology and Immunopathology | 2018
Arthur Wong; Janet M. Lanyon; Sara J. McKee; Richard Linedale; Lucy Woolford; Trevor Long; Graham R. Leggatt
Species-specific antibodies (Ab) for the measurement of immunoglobulins (Ig) are valuable tools for determining the humoral immune status of threatened and endangered wildlife species such as dugongs. However, no studies have reported antibody reagents against dugong immunoglobulin. The object of this study was to develop an Ab with specificity for dugong IgG and apply this tool to survey total IgG levels in plasma samples from a live wild population of dugongs in southern Queensland, Australia. Dugong IgG was isolated from plasma by protein A/G column chromatography and a polyclonal antiserum was successfully raised against the dugong IgG through immunization of mice. The anti-dugong antiserum was reactive with dugong serum but not immunoglobulin from other species such as rats and humans. When tested against a panel of dugong plasma samples, relative IgG levels from dugongs (n = 116) showed biologically relevant relationships with pregnancy status and a principal component of Body Mass Index (BMI)/globulin/fecal glucocorticosteroid (chronic stress) levels combined, which together accounted for 9.2% of the variation in total Ig levels. Together these data suggest that dugongs show variation in total IgG and that this correlates with some physiological parameters of dugong health.