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Clinical Cancer Research | 2009

The Prioritization of Cancer Antigens: A National Cancer Institute Pilot Project for the Acceleration of Translational Research

Martin A. Cheever; James P. Allison; Andrea S. Ferris; Olivera J. Finn; Benjamin M. Hastings; Toby T. Hecht; Ira Mellman; Sheila A. Prindiville; Jaye L. Viner; Louis M. Weiner; Lynn M. Matrisian

The purpose of the National Cancer Institute pilot project to prioritize cancer antigens was to develop a well-vetted, priority-ranked list of cancer vaccine target antigens based on predefined and preweighted objective criteria. An additional aim was for the National Cancer Institute to test a new approach for prioritizing translational research opportunities based on an analytic hierarchy process for dealing with complex decisions. Antigen prioritization involved developing a list of “ideal” cancer antigen criteria/characteristics, assigning relative weights to those criteria using pairwise comparisons, selecting 75 representative antigens for comparison and ranking, assembling information on the predefined criteria for the selected antigens, and ranking the antigens based on the predefined, preweighted criteria. Using the pairwise approach, the result of criteria weighting, in descending order, was as follows: (a) therapeutic function, (b) immunogenicity, (c) role of the antigen in oncogenicity, (d) specificity, (e) expression level and percent of antigen-positive cells, (f) stem cell expression, (g) number of patients with antigen-positive cancers, (h) number of antigenic epitopes, and (i) cellular location of antigen expression. None of the 75 antigens had all of the characteristics of the ideal cancer antigen. However, 46 were immunogenic in clinical trials and 20 of them had suggestive clinical efficacy in the “therapeutic function” category. These findings reflect the current status of the cancer vaccine field, highlight the possibility that additional organized efforts and funding would accelerate the development of therapeutically effective cancer vaccines, and accentuate the need for prioritization. (Clin Cancer Res 2009;15(17):5323–37)


Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences | 1986

Estrogens Regulate Production of Specific Growth Factors in Hormone‐Dependent Human Breast Cancer

Marc E. Lippman; Karen Huff; Raimund Jakesz; Toby T. Hecht; Attan Kasid; Susan E. Bates; Robert B. Dickson

Human breast cancer cells in long-term tissue culture are responsive to estrogens as assessed by activation of specific gene products. A group of estrogen-regulated, secreted growth factors are responsible for the proliferative responses of these cells both in vitro and in vivo.


Protein Expression and Purification | 2003

Production and purification of refolded recombinant human IL-7 from inclusion bodies.

Thomas Ouellette; Sophie Destrau; Timothy Ouellette; Jianwei Zhu; John M. Roach; J.Daniel Coffman; Toby T. Hecht; James E Lynch; Steven L. Giardina

A recombinant form of human rhIL-7 was overexpressed in Escherichia coli HMS174 (DE3) pLysS under the control of a T7 promoter. The resulting insoluble inclusion bodies were separated from cellular debris by cross-flow filtration and solubilized by homogenization with 6 M guanidine HCl. Attempts at refolding rhIL-7 from solubilized inclusion bodies without prior purification of monomeric, denatured rhIL-7 were not successful. Denatured, monomeric rhIL-7 was therefore initially purified by size-exclusion chromatography using Prep-Grade Pharmacia Superdex 200. Correctly folded rhIL-7 monomer was generated by statically refolding the denatured protein at a final protein concentration of 80-100 microg/ml in 100 mM Tris, 2mM EDTA, 500 mM L-arginine, pH 9.0, buffer with 0.55 g/l oxidized glutathione at 2-8 degrees C for at least 48 h. The refolded rhIL-7 was subsequently purified by low-pressure liquid chromatography, using a combination of hydrophobic interaction, cation-exchange, and size-exclusion chromatography. The purified final product was >95% pure by SDS-PAGE stained with Coomassie brilliant blue, high-pressure size-exclusion chromatography (SEC-HPLC), and reverse-phase HPLC. The endotoxin level was <0.05 EU/mg. The final purified product was biologically active in a validated IL-7 dependent pre-B-cell bioassay. In anticipation of human clinical trials, this material is currently being evaluated for safety and efficacy in non-human primate toxicology studies.


Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology | 2013

Purification of clinical-grade disulfide stabilized antibody fragment variable—Pseudomonas exotoxin conjugate (dsFv-PE38) expressed in Escherichia coli

Hua Jiang; Yueqing Xie; Andrew Burnette; John M. Roach; Steven L. Giardina; Toby T. Hecht; Stephen P. Creekmore; Gautam Mitra; Jianwei Zhu

Immunotoxins are rationally designed cancer targeting and killing agents. Disulfide stabilized antibody Fv portion—toxin conjugates (dsFv-toxin) are third generation immunotoxins containing only the antibody fragment variable portions and a toxin fused to the VH or VL. Pseudomonas exotoxin fragment (PE-38) is a commonly used toxin in immunotoxin clinical trials. dsFv-toxin purification was previously published, but the recovery was not satisfactory. This report describes the development of a cGMP production process of the dsFv-toxin that incorporated a novel purification method. The method has been successfully applied to the clinical manufacturing of two dsFv-PE38 immunotoxins, MR1-1 targeting EGFRvIII and HA22 targeting CD22. The two subunits, VL and VH PE-38 were expressed separately in Escherichia coli using recombinant technology. Following cell lysis, inclusion bodies were isolated from the biomass harvested from fermentation in animal source component-free media. The dsFv-toxin was formed after denaturation and refolding, and subsequently purified to homogeneity through ammonium sulfate precipitation, hydrophobic interaction and ion-exchange chromatography steps. It was shown, in a direct comparison experiment using MR1-1 as model protein, that the recovery from the new purification method was improved three times over that from previously published method. The improved recovery was also demonstrated during the clinical production of two dsFv-PE38 immunotoxins—MR1-1 and HA22.


Blood | 2003

IL-7 therapy dramatically alters peripheral T-cell homeostasis in normal and SIV-infected nonhuman primates.

Terry J. Fry; Marcin Moniuszko; Stephen P. Creekmore; Susan J. Donohue; Steven L. Giardina; Toby T. Hecht; Brenna J. Hill; Kristen Komschlies; Joseph E. Tomaszewski; Genoveffa Franchini; Crystal L. Mackall


Journal of Immunology | 1987

Human T cells targeted with anti-T3 cross-linked to antitumor antibody prevent tumor growth in nude mice.

Julie A. Titus; Maria A. Garrido; Toby T. Hecht; David F. Winkler; John R. Wunderlich; David M. Segal


Journal of Immunology | 1988

LGL-1: a non-polymorphic antigen expressed on a major population of mouse natural killer cells.

Llewellyn H. Mason; Steven L. Giardina; Toby T. Hecht; John R. Ortaldo; Bonnie J. Mathieson


Clinical Cancer Research | 1995

Phase Ia trial of murine immunoglobulin A antitransferrin receptor antibody 42/6.

Donald E. Brooks; Charles W. Taylor; Betty Dos Santos; Hannah M. Linden; Alan N. Houghton; Toby T. Hecht


Cancer Research | 1990

Targeting Human T-Lymphocytes with Bispecific Antibodies to React against Human Ovarian Carcinoma Cells Growing in nu/nu Mice

Maria A. Garrido; Maria J. Valdayo; David F. Winkler; Julie A. Titus; Toby T. Hecht; Pilar Pérez; David M. Segal; John R. Wunderlich


Journal of Immunological Methods | 2006

Development of a quantitative cell-based ELISA, for a humanized anti-IL-2/IL-15 receptor β antibody (HuMikβ1), and correlation with functional activity using an antigen-transfected murine cell line

Xiao Yi Yang; Eying Chen; Hengguang Jiang; Wanda K. Hartmann; Gautam Mitra; Toby T. Hecht; Gopalan Soman

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David F. Winkler

National Institutes of Health

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David M. Segal

National Institutes of Health

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John R. Ortaldo

National Institutes of Health

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John R. Wunderlich

National Institutes of Health

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Julie A. Titus

National Institutes of Health

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Maria A. Garrido

National Institutes of Health

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Steven L. Giardina

Science Applications International Corporation

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Gautam Mitra

Science Applications International Corporation

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Jianwei Zhu

Science Applications International Corporation

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