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| <h1 id="IntroVaccine">Preface</h1> | | <h1 id="IntroVaccine">Preface</h1> |
| <h3>How Neoantigen-based Cancer Immunotherapy Works</h3> | | <h3>How Neoantigen-based Cancer Immunotherapy Works</h3> |
− | <p class="lead"><b>[FIGURE HERE]</b></p> | + | <p class="lead"><b><span style="color:red">[FIGURE HERE]</span></b></p> |
| <p class="lead">A specific neoantigen that is differentially expressed on tumour cells, and not healthy cells is supplied to the patient through a vaccine formulation. Dendritic cells uptake the neoantigen from the vaccine formulation. Alongside the neoantigen, the vaccine formulation supplies an adjuvant that activates the dendritic cell to uptake foreign material, and perceive them as danger signals.</p> | | <p class="lead">A specific neoantigen that is differentially expressed on tumour cells, and not healthy cells is supplied to the patient through a vaccine formulation. Dendritic cells uptake the neoantigen from the vaccine formulation. Alongside the neoantigen, the vaccine formulation supplies an adjuvant that activates the dendritic cell to uptake foreign material, and perceive them as danger signals.</p> |
| <p class="lead">The dendritic cell then processes the neoantigen and cross-represents it on MHC1 complexes, where naïve CD8+ T cells can recognize it. Once the naïve CD8+ cells recognize the neoantigen, they mature into cytotoxic CD8+ T cells that specifically attack cells that express this neoantigen; in this case, the tumour cells.</p> | | <p class="lead">The dendritic cell then processes the neoantigen and cross-represents it on MHC1 complexes, where naïve CD8+ T cells can recognize it. Once the naïve CD8+ cells recognize the neoantigen, they mature into cytotoxic CD8+ T cells that specifically attack cells that express this neoantigen; in this case, the tumour cells.</p> |
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| <div class="col-lg-12"> | | <div class="col-lg-12"> |
| <h3>Rising Importance of Cancer Vaccination</h3> | | <h3>Rising Importance of Cancer Vaccination</h3> |
− | <p class="lead">The immunogenicity of Neoantigens leading to T cell activation has long been demonstrated in patients (<a href="#Wolfel1995"><span style="color:blue">Wolfel <i>et al.</i>, 1995</span></a>). In fact, preclinical and clinical data has already shown that neoantigen specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) constitute the most potent T cell populations for tumour rejection (<a href="#Wolfel1995"><span style="color:blue">Wolfel <i>et al.</i>, 1995</span></a>; <a href="#Matsushita2012"><span style="color:blue">Matsushita <i>et al.</i></span>). | + | <p class="lead">The immunogenicity of Neoantigens leading to T cell activation has long been demonstrated in patients (<a href="#Wolfel1995"><span style="color:blue">Wolfel <i>et al.</i>, 1995</span></a>). In fact, preclinical and clinical data has already shown that neoantigen specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) constitute the most potent T cell populations for tumour rejection (<a href="#Wolfel1995"><span style="color:blue">Wolfel <i>et al.</i>, 1995</span></a>; <a href="#Matsushita2012"><span style="color:blue">Matsushita <i>et al.</i>, 2012</span>). |
| Still, the natural production of neoantigen specific CTLs by a patient’s immune system is scarce because of low clonal frequency and ineffective presentation of neoantigens (<a href="#Alexandrov2013"><span style="color:blue">Alexandrov <i>et al.</i>, 2013</span></a>; <a href="#Zhu2017"><span style="color:blue">Zhu <i>et al.</i>, 2017</span></a>). Therefore, cancer vaccines or adjuvant cancer therapies (ACT) are crucial to potentiate immunity against neoantigens for cancer treatment. Accordingly, a large number of strategies have been progressed for the creation, formulation and delivery of various cancer vaccines; for example, whole tumor cell lysate, nucleotide (mRNA/ DNA), protein or peptides-based vaccines, dendritic cell (DC) based vaccines, viral vectors, biomaterial-assisted vaccines, and so on. | | Still, the natural production of neoantigen specific CTLs by a patient’s immune system is scarce because of low clonal frequency and ineffective presentation of neoantigens (<a href="#Alexandrov2013"><span style="color:blue">Alexandrov <i>et al.</i>, 2013</span></a>; <a href="#Zhu2017"><span style="color:blue">Zhu <i>et al.</i>, 2017</span></a>). Therefore, cancer vaccines or adjuvant cancer therapies (ACT) are crucial to potentiate immunity against neoantigens for cancer treatment. Accordingly, a large number of strategies have been progressed for the creation, formulation and delivery of various cancer vaccines; for example, whole tumor cell lysate, nucleotide (mRNA/ DNA), protein or peptides-based vaccines, dendritic cell (DC) based vaccines, viral vectors, biomaterial-assisted vaccines, and so on. |
| However, it remains challenging to develop a universal and effective delivery strategy to target neoantigen-based vaccines to professional antigen-presenting cells (APCs) for eliciting robust and potent T cell responses against cancer.</p> | | However, it remains challenging to develop a universal and effective delivery strategy to target neoantigen-based vaccines to professional antigen-presenting cells (APCs) for eliciting robust and potent T cell responses against cancer.</p> |
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| <div class="card-header"> | | <div class="card-header"> |
| <h4 class="card-link"> | | <h4 class="card-link"> |
− | Design of gRNAs after new theory | + | Design of gRNAs after new hypothesis |
| </h4> | | </h4> |
| </div> | | </div> |
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| <p class="lead">Halfway through our project (see <a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:EPFL/Notebook-Detection"><span style="color:blue">Notebook</span></a> for more details), after starting testing our amplicons with Cas12a and the fluorescent reporter (DNase Alert), we realized that the probe itself (more specifically the product of RCA in the absence of miRNA, i.e. with no amplicon) was triggering the Cas system causing a very high fluorescence signal, comparable to the signal obtained for the samples with miRNA (i.e. with probe+amplicon).</p> | | <p class="lead">Halfway through our project (see <a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:EPFL/Notebook-Detection"><span style="color:blue">Notebook</span></a> for more details), after starting testing our amplicons with Cas12a and the fluorescent reporter (DNase Alert), we realized that the probe itself (more specifically the product of RCA in the absence of miRNA, i.e. with no amplicon) was triggering the Cas system causing a very high fluorescence signal, comparable to the signal obtained for the samples with miRNA (i.e. with probe+amplicon).</p> |
| <br> | | <br> |
− | <p class="lead">We hypothesized that this was due to the fact the our Cas12a was working PAM-independently (more details in "New theory on Cas12a activation - miRNA" in the "Fluorescence readout" section). More specifically, our gRNA was meant to target the whole stem (and in addition 7 bases in the small loop) of the amplicon; since the stem is double-stranded, the target sequence for the gRNA is also present in the probe (in the opposite strand).</p> | + | <p class="lead">We hypothesized that this was due to the fact the our Cas12a was working PAM-independently (more details in "Promiscuous Cas12a activation: probes as a target" in <a href="https://2018.igem.org/Team:EPFL/Results"><span style="color:blue">Results</span></a>). More specifically, our gRNA was meant to target the whole stem (and in addition 7 bases in the small loop) of the amplicon; since the stem is double-stranded, the target sequence for the gRNA is also present in the probe (in the opposite strand).</p> |
| <p class="lead">This would not have been a problem if the Cas had been working, as expected, PAM-dependently, because the PAM is only contained in the amplicon, not in the probe. Nonetheless, if the Cas does not need the PAM sequence, but simple recognizes a target from the sequence of the gRNA, then also the probe itself is recognized as a target. Moreover, since the concentration of the probe in the RCA reaction is higher than the expected concentration of amplicon, the signal from the probe behaves as noise, overcoming the signal of interest (i.e. from the amplicon).</p> | | <p class="lead">This would not have been a problem if the Cas had been working, as expected, PAM-dependently, because the PAM is only contained in the amplicon, not in the probe. Nonetheless, if the Cas does not need the PAM sequence, but simple recognizes a target from the sequence of the gRNA, then also the probe itself is recognized as a target. Moreover, since the concentration of the probe in the RCA reaction is higher than the expected concentration of amplicon, the signal from the probe behaves as noise, overcoming the signal of interest (i.e. from the amplicon).</p> |
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