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A Immunotherapy: Lessons From Mice, Monkeys and Men

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Title: A Immunotherapy: Lessons From Mice, Monkeys and Men


1
Aß ImmunotherapyLessons From Mice, Monkeys and
Men
  • Cynthia A. Lemere
  • Center for Neurologic Diseases
  • Brigham and Womens Hospital
  • Harvard Medical School
  • Boston, MA USA

2
Silver Stained Plaques and Tangles
3
Alzheimers Disease
A syndrome arising from a chronic imbalance
between Aß production and Aß clearance that leads
to gradual cerebral accumulation of Aß42. The
imbalance can be caused by numerous distinct
genetic (or environmental) alterations (e.g.,
mutations in APP, PS1 or PS2 lead to increased Aß
production and early onset FAD). Aß aggregates
toxic in vitro and cause impaired memory and
learning, gliosis and neuritic dystrophy in vivo
(APP, PSAPP tg mice)
4
Several Therapeutic Approaches Based Upon the
Importance of ß-Amyloid in AD
  • inhibit Aß-generating proteases (ß- or
    g-secretase)
  • prevent the aggregation of Aß into oligomers
    and fibrils
  • prevent the deposition of Aß into plaques
  • enhance Aß clearance
  • interfere with the toxic response of neurons to
    amyloid
  • inhibit the inflammatory process around amyloid
    plaques

5
Aß Vaccination Potential Therapy For
Alzheimers Disease
6
Mouse Studies
  • Active Aß immunization in APP and APP/PS1 Tg
    mice
  • Generates anti-Aß titers
  • Lowers cerebral Aß levels (if early enough)
    (Schenk et al., Nature 1999 Weiner, Lemere et
    al., Ann Neurol 2000 and many other
    publications)
  • B cell epitopes within Aß amino-terminus, Aß1-15
  • T cell epitopes within Aß16-42
  • Increases peripheral levels of Aß in blood
  • (Lemere et al, Neurobiol Dis 2003)
  • Improves behavior/cognition on certain tasks
  • (Janus et al., Nature 2000 Morgan et al., Nature
    2000 Dodart et al., Nature NS 2002, etc.)

7
(No Transcript)
8
Passive Transfer of Aß Antibodies in Mice
  • Results - direct application of Aß antibodies
    to brain surface clears local plaques (Bacskai
    et al., Nat Med 2001)
  • - i.p. injections decreased brain Aß (Bard et
    al., Nat Med 2000) - increased Aß in blood
    (DeMattos et al., PNAS 2001)
    - improved behavior (Dodart et
    al, Nat Neurosci 2002 Kotilinek et al., J
    Neurosci 2002 Wilcock et al., J
    Neuroinflammation 2004)
  • HC injections of 2 Aß Mabs in 3xAD-Tg mice
    cleared extracellular and intracellular Aß as
    well as early tau aggregates but not
    hyperphosphorylated tau (Oddo et al., Neuron
    2004)
  • Intracerebral ventricular injections of Aß
    antibodies protected APP tg mice from synaptic
    loss and gliosis (Chuahan et al., J Neurosci
    Res, 2002)
  • Passive transfer protected neurons from induced
    seizures in APP tg mice (Mohajeri et al., J
    Biol Chem 2002)
  • Microhemorrhage observed in very old APP tg
    mice with CAA
  • (Pfiefer et al., Science 2002 Wilcock et al., J
    Neuroinflamm 2004 Racke et al., J Neurosci
    2005 )

9
Passive immunization in PDAPP Tg mice
Aß Pab by i.p. weekly for 6 months 93 reduction
Bard et al., Nature Medicine, 2000
10
Aß Immunization of Caribbean Vervet Monkeys
(Chlorocebus atheiops)
  • African Green Monkeys
  • Imported to St. Kitts 1670
  • Collaboration with BSF
  • -- 8 s.c. injections 1 mg Aß40/42 CFA/IFA over
    10 months
  • -- 5 vervets immunized, 5 controls (all between
    15 and 30 yr)
  • -- B cell epitope in Aß
    N-terminus, reduced cerebral Aß load and
    gliosis, increased plasma Aß, no T or B cells in
    brain
  • (Lemere et al., Am J Pathol 2004)

11
Aß Immunization Reduced Cerebral Aß
Controls
Immunized
12
Proposed Mechanisms
  • Aß antibodies prevent Aß aggregation and/or
    dissolve Aß aggregates in vitro (Solomon
    et al., PNAS 1996, 1997)
  • Fc-mediated microglial phagocytosis of Aß in
    brain (Bard et al., Nature Med 2000 )
  • -- Fc-mediated response not required (Fab
    FcR-/- mice)
  • (Bacskai et al., J Neurosci 2002
    Das et al., J Neurosci 2003)
  • Peripheral Sink Hypothesis shift in gradient
    across the BBB such that there is an increase in
    efflux of Aß from brain to blood (DeMattos et
    al., PNAS 2001 Lemere et al., Neurobiol Dis,
    2003)

13
ELAN/AHP/Wyeth Human Clinical Trials
  • Trial halted (January 2002) 6 of
    Aß-immunized patients (18/300) developed
    meningoencephalitis anti-Aß antibodies detected
    in serum in subset (Schenk, Nature Rev 2002
    Orgogozo et al, Neurology 2003 Gilman et al.,
    Neurology 2005)
  • Anti-Aß antibodies recognize AD plaques and CAA
    but not soluble Aß42 nor APP (Hock et al.,
    Nature Med 2002) epitopes against free
    N-terminus of Aß (Lee et al., Ann Neurol 2005)
  • Some slowing of cognitive decline (Hock et al.,
    Neuron 2003 Gilman et al., Neurology 2005)
  • Reduced Aß deposition in brain (Case Studies
    Nicoll et al., Nature Med 2003 Ferrer et al.,
    Brain Pathol 2004 Masliah et al., Neurology
    2005)
  • Reduced tau levels in CSF (Gilman et al.,
    Neurology 2005)
  • Cortical shrinkage by MRI in patients who
    generated Aß antibodies even though some clinical
    improvement observed (Fox et al., Neurology 2005)

14
Reduced Plaque Burden in Immunized Pt
From Nicoll et al., Nature Medicine 2003
15
Possible explanations for the adverse effects?
  • The immunogen, Aß1-42, may have been recognized
    as self- antigen by some, leading to an
    autoimmune, toxic T cell response in the CNS
  • The adjuvant, QS-21, purified saponin, is known
    to have
  • prodominantly Th1/CD4 cellular immune
    effects and can induce CTL against antigens
    (Kenney et al., Vaccine 2002 Cribbs et al., Int
    Immunol 2003)
  • Increased T cell response to Aß in aged humans
    (Monsonego et al., JCI 2003)
  • Addition of polysorbate 80 to vaccine
    formulation
  • (Nicholl et al., Nature Med 2003)
  • Thus, development of an active Aß vaccine that
    would produce a strong humoral response but
    avoid an Aß-specific T cell response may be
    beneficial.

16
Novel Immunogens to Short Aß PeptidesPublicatio
ns in Preparation(cannot show immunogens yet)
17
Intranasal Aß ImmunizationOur previous work
  • Intranasal (i.n.) Aß immunization without
    adjuvant resulted in a modest humoral immune
    response that lowered cerebral A? in PDAPP tg
    mice (Weiner et al., Ann Neurol, 2000 Lemere et
    al., NY Acad Sci, 2000).
  • Adjuvant LT(R192G), a mutant form of E. coli heat
    labile toxin that is less toxic than its native
    form, enhanced the generation of Aß antibodies
    when administered intranasally with Aß peptides
    (Lemere et al., Neurobiol Aging, 2002).

18
Immunization of J20 APP tg mice with 2 novel Aß
immunogens
  • J20 APP-tg mice (hAPPSw, Ind)/PDGF-promoter on a
    mixed C57BL/6 x DBA background (L. Mucke, UCSF)
  • 6 month-old mice received intranasal immunization
    weekly
  • (n 7 mice/ group)
  • Treatment Groups
  • 100?g Aß Immunogen 1 5?g LT(R192G)
  • 50 µg Aß Immunogen 2 5 µg LT(R192G)
  • 5 µg LT(R192G)
  • H2O
  • Treated for 24 weeks at end, 5 mice per group
    except vehicle (6).

19
New Aß Immunogens Summary
  • Intranasal immunization using our novel short Aß
    immunogens led to a robust humoral response in
    both WT and J20 APP tg mice.
  • Ig isotypes were mainly of the Th2 type B cell
    epitopes were located within the amino-terminus
    of Aß.
  • Splenocytes proliferated against the immunizing
    peptides but not full-length Aß.
  • Immunization resulted in lowering of plaque
    burden and plaque-associated pathology in APP tg
    mice.
  • No toxicity or untoward affects were observed. B
    and T cells were absent from brain.

20
Aß Immunotherapy Conclusions
  • Active Aß vaccination prevents or reduces AD-like
    pathology and improves cognition but needs to be
    made safer.
  • Generating a humoral immune response while
    avoiding an Aß-specific cellular response may
    improve safety.
  • Passive transfer of Aß antibodies is also
    effective at lowering cerebral Aß and improving
    cognition but has been associated with
    microhemorrhage in the presence of abundant CAA
    in old APP tg mice. Human trials are underway.
  • Ultimately, an active vaccine would be less
    costly and would allow coverage of a much larger
    population compared to passive transfer.
  • Our novel immunogens appear to be safe. Further
    testing is required but first an animal model is
    needed.

21
All truth passes through three stages. First,
it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed.
Third, it is accepted as being self-evident. Art
hur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) German Philosopher
22
Acknowledgements
Center for Neurologic Diseases Lemere Lab
Others Tim Seabrook Gal Bitan Marcel
Maier Weiming Xia Liying Jiang Jackie Sears
Katelyn Thomas Dominic Walsh Ying Peng
Noel Lazo Amy Huynh Former Lab Members Edward
Spooner Jeanne Bloom Diana Li
Dr. Lennart Mucke (J20 APP tg mice) --
Gladstone Institute, SF, CA Dr. John Clements
LT(R192G) -- Tulane U. Medical School,
LA Elan Pharmaceuticals (ELISA Mabs) -- So.
San Francisco, CA Drs. Todd Golde and Pritam Das
(ELISA) -- Mayo Clinic, Jacksonville,
FA Funding Alzheimers Association, NIH
(AG20159) to CAL, and a special thanks to the
Brunozzi Family.
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