Project Details
Description
Abstract
This application proposes research designed to provide solid mechanistic underpinnings for immunotherapy
and vaccination to prevent and treat atherosclerosis. Vaccination with MHC-II restricted peptide epitopes from
apolipoprotein B (ApoB) ameliorates atherosclerosis by inducing ApoB-specific regulatory CD4 T cells (Tregs).
I have developed reagents (tetramers and dextramers) to detect and isolate these ApoB-specific Tregs at the
single cell level in mice and humans. The proposed work has a T cell aspect, currently supported by R01
HL121697 (2014-2018), and a vascular macrophage aspect, currently supported by R01 HL115232 (2012-
2022). To gain better mechanistic insight, I propose to adoptively transfer ApoB-specific Tregs (if necessary
expanded in Rag2-/- mice) into recipient mice and measure atherosclerosis. I will also transfer ApoB peptide-
specific antibodies to formally test possible antibody effects, and test the role of B cells in two B cell-deficient
mouse lines. I will study changes in functions of vascular macrophages in vivo after vaccination. To improve
the vaccine efficacy, I propose to test vaccine formulations similar to what would be used clinically, test the
atherosclerosis vaccines in two other mouse models of atherosclerosis (Apoe-/- on chow diet, Ldlr-/- on high fat
diet), optimize the vaccination protocol, and add low-dose IL-2 to stabilize Tregs. To discover how and why
Tregs switch to effector T cells, I will use FoxP3 (the Treg defining transcription factor) lineage tracker mice.
TCR-Seq will test the hypothesis that the apparent switch is caused by an outgrowth of a minor population of
pro-inflammatory ApoB-specifc CD4 T cells. To test cell-exogenous factors, I will incubate ApoB-specific CD4
T cells with explanted normal or atherosclerotic aortas, and measure epigenetic changes by DNA and histone
methylation around the FoxP3 locus. To prepare for translating the vaccine into humans, I propose more
human work, including mass cytometry (CyTOF) on peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) with 42-
“color” panels. Barcoded scRNA-Seq to obtain single cell transcriptomes will define the cell types more deeply.
I propose to expand the current clinical data set (all women, most HIV+) to both genders and HIV-. When this
work is completed, we will have a good understanding how atherosclerosis vaccination works. We will have
extensive human data for the phenotype of ApoB-specific CD4 T cells in PBMCs collected from cardiovascular
disease cases and controls.
| Status | Active |
|---|---|
| Effective start/end date | 3/18/19 → 2/28/26 |
Funding
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: $692,793.00
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: $816,586.00
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: $318,324.00
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: $692,899.00
- National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute: $769,654.00
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