GV1001

GV1001 is a 16-amino acid peptide derived from the active site of human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT 611-626) developed as a cancer vaccine and repurposed for Alzheimer's disease, with demonstrated anti-inflammatory, neuroprotective, and cell-penetrating properties independent of its immunogenic function.

GV1001 is a 16-amino acid peptide corresponding to residues 611-626 of human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT), the catalytic subunit of telomerase. Originally developed by GemVax & KAEL as a therapeutic cancer vaccine exploiting telomerase overexpression in malignancies, GV1001 has emerged as a multifunctional peptide with biological activities extending well beyond adaptive immunity.

Overview

GV1001 was developed by the Norwegian company Pharmexa (later GemVax & KAEL of South Korea) based on the identification of hTERT as a universal tumor-associated antigen. The peptide sequence was selected from the reverse transcriptase domain of hTERT because it contains overlapping epitopes that bind multiple HLA class I and class II alleles, enabling immune responses in genetically diverse patient populations without HLA pre-screening. This promiscuous MHC binding distinguishes GV1001 from many cancer peptide vaccines that are restricted to specific HLA alleles.

The clinical development of GV1001 has followed two parallel tracks. In oncology, GV1001 completed the Phase 3 TeloVac trial in pancreatic cancer (1062 patients) and Phase I/II trials in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and hepatocellular carcinoma. In neuroscience, GemVax & KAEL has developed GV1001 for Alzheimer's disease based on preclinical and clinical evidence of anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective effects mediated through mechanisms entirely independent of adaptive immune activation.

Mechanism of Action

GV1001 exerts biological effects through two distinct mechanisms: adaptive immune activation (cancer vaccine function) and direct intracellular signaling (anti-inflammatory/neuroprotective function).

Cancer vaccine mechanism: When administered intradermally with GM-CSF adjuvant, GV1001 is taken up by dendritic cells at the injection site. Dendritic cells process the peptide and present fragments on MHC class I molecules (to activate CD8+ cytotoxic T lymphocytes) and MHC class II molecules (to activate CD4+ helper T cells). The resulting hTERT-specific CTLs circulate systemically and kill tumor cells that express telomerase and present hTERT-derived peptides on their surface MHC. The promiscuous HLA binding of GV1001 means that most patients can mount an immune response regardless of HLA type, a critical advantage for a universal cancer vaccine.

Direct cell-penetrating and anti-inflammatory mechanism: Independent of its immunogenic function, GV1001 penetrates cell membranes through its amphipathic helical structure. Once intracellular, GV1001 binds heat shock proteins HSP90 and HSP70, which normally serve as chaperones for NF-kB signaling components (IKK complex, IkBalpha). By sequestering these HSPs, GV1001 disrupts NF-kB activation, reducing nuclear translocation of p65/RelA and transcription of pro-inflammatory target genes including TNF-alpha, IL-1beta, IL-6, COX-2, and iNOS. Kim BK et al. (2023)

Neuroprotective mechanism: In neural cells, GV1001's NF-kB inhibition reduces neuroinflammation, a major driver of Alzheimer's disease progression. Additionally, GV1001 has been shown to: (1) reduce amyloid-beta oligomer-induced neurotoxicity, (2) inhibit reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation in neurons, (3) stabilize mitochondrial membrane potential under stress, and (4) reduce tau hyperphosphorylation in models of tauopathy. These effects appear mediated through HSP-dependent pathways and are independent of any immune response.

Reconstitution Calculator

GV1001

**GV1001** is a 16-amino acid peptide corresponding to residues 611-626 of human

Draw Volume
2.000mL
Syringe Units
200units
Concentration
280mcg/mL
Doses / Vial
1doses
Vial Total
560mcg
Waste / Vial
0mcg
Syringe Cap.
100units · 1mL
Recommended Schedule
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
Frequencyweekly then biweekly

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Dose requires 2.000mL but syringe holds 1mL. Increase BAC water, use a larger syringe, or split injections.

How to reconstitute
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Set up a clean workspace with all supplies ready.

1.Wash hands thoroughly, put on disposable gloves
2.Your 0.56mg peptide vial (lyophilized powder)
3.Bacteriostatic water (you'll need 2mL)
4.A 3–5mL syringe with 21–25 gauge needle for reconstitution
5.Alcohol swabs (70% isopropyl)
Use bacteriostatic water (0.9% benzyl alcohol) for multi-dose vials. Sterile water is only safe for single-use.
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1x / week for weeks

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4vials
4 doses7 days/vial
Cost Breakdown
Vial price
$0.00per dose
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Store 2-8°C30 day shelf lifeSwirl gentlyFor research purposes only

Research

Combination with Immune Checkpoint Inhibitors

Preclinical and early clinical investigations have explored combining GV1001 with immune checkpoint inhibitors (anti-PD-1, anti-CTLA-4). The rationale is that GV1001 primes tumor-specific T cells, while checkpoint inhibitors remove the immunosuppressive brakes that limit T-cell effector function within the tumor microenvironment. This combination strategy aims to overcome the limited efficacy seen when GV1001 was used as monotherapy in the TeloVac trial.

Clinical Research Protocols

  • TeloVac Phase III (ISRCTN4382138): GV1001 0.56 mg intradermal injection on days 1, 3, 5, 8, 15, 22, then monthly; GM-CSF 75 mcg co-injection at each vaccination site; administered with gemcitabine 1000 mg/m2 IV + capecitabine 830 mg/m2 PO twice daily
  • NSCLC Phase I/II: GV1001 dose escalation (0.07, 0.7, 2.8 mg intradermal) with GM-CSF 75 mcg; vaccination on days 1, 3, 5, 8, 15, 22 then monthly boosters
  • Immune monitoring: IFN-gamma ELISPOT assay, proliferation assays, and DTH (delayed-type hypersensitivity) skin testing to assess GV1001-specific T-cell responses
  • Combination protocols under investigation: GV1001 + anti-PD-1 (pembrolizumab/nivolumab) in pancreatic cancer and NSCLC settings

Immunological Mechanisms (Deep Dive)

HLA-promiscuous binding:

  • GV1001 binds HLA-A2, HLA-A24, HLA-B7, HLA-B35, and multiple HLA-DR alleles
  • This broad HLA binding profile enables immune responses in >95% of patients regardless of HLA type
  • The 16-amino acid length accommodates both MHC class I (8-10 mer) and MHC class II (13-25 mer) binding motifs within the same peptide

T-cell response characteristics:

  • CD4+ T-helper 1 (Th1) polarized responses predominate, characterized by IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha production
  • CD8+ CTL responses demonstrate direct cytotoxicity against hTERT+ tumor cells through perforin/granzyme pathway
  • Generation of central memory T cells (TCM) provides long-lasting anti-tumor surveillance
  • T-cell receptor (TCR) repertoire analysis reveals oligoclonal expansion of GV1001-specific T cells

Tumor immune evasion and GV1001:

  • Tumors may downregulate MHC class I to escape CTL recognition; GV1001-induced CD4+ T cells provide MHC-independent anti-tumor effects via cytokine release
  • Telomerase downregulation as an escape mechanism is limited because telomerase is essential for tumor cell immortality
  • Regulatory T cells (Tregs) and myeloid-derived suppressor cells (MDSCs) in the tumor microenvironment may blunt vaccine responses, providing rationale for checkpoint inhibitor combinations

Ongoing & Future Research

  • GV1001 combination trials with immune checkpoint inhibitors in pancreatic cancer and NSCLC
  • Investigation of GV1001 as maintenance therapy after first-line chemotherapy response
  • Exploration of neoantigen-based personalized vaccines combined with GV1001 as a universal tumor antigen component
  • GV1001 in non-oncology applications: Alzheimer's disease (anti-inflammatory properties), ischemia-reperfusion injury, pulmonary fibrosis
  • Development of next-generation telomerase vaccines incorporating multiple hTERT epitopes and novel adjuvant platforms (TLR agonists, nanoparticle delivery)
  • Biomarker-driven patient selection strategies to identify patients most likely to mount robust immune responses

Phase I/II Trials in NSCLC

Brunsvig PF et al. (2006) reported the first clinical trial of GV1001 in 26 patients with advanced NSCLC. GV1001 was administered intradermally with GM-CSF as adjuvant. Immune responses were detected in 11 of 24 evaluable patients (46%). GV1001-specific T-cell responses correlated with prolonged survival: immune responders had a median survival of 19 months compared to 3.5 months for non-responders. No grade 3/4 toxicities were attributed to the vaccine. Published in Cancer Immunol Immunother 55(12):1553-1564.

Phase III TeloVac Trial in Pancreatic Cancer

Middleton GW et al. (2014) conducted the pivotal Phase III TeloVac trial, randomizing 1062 patients with locally advanced or metastatic pancreatic cancer to three arms: (1) gemcitabine/capecitabine chemotherapy alone, (2) chemotherapy followed by sequential GV1001 vaccination, or (3) concurrent chemotherapy with GV1001 vaccination. The primary endpoint of overall survival was not met: median OS was 7.9 months in the chemotherapy-alone arm versus 6.9 months (sequential) and 8.4 months (concurrent). The concurrent arm showed a non-significant trend toward improved survival. Immune response rates were lower than expected (25%), potentially due to immunosuppression from concurrent chemotherapy. Published in Br J Cancer 108(12):2394-2401.

Phase I/II in Hepatocellular Carcinoma

Greten TF et al. (2010) evaluated GV1001 in patients with advanced hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). The study demonstrated that GV1001 vaccination could induce hTERT-specific T-cell responses in HCC patients, a population with significant baseline immunosuppression. Immune responders showed trends toward improved clinical outcomes, supporting the immunogenicity of GV1001 even in immunologically challenging tumor microenvironments. Published in J Hepatol 52(4):583-589.

Immune Response Characterization

Bernhardt SL et al. (2006) characterized the immune responses induced by GV1001 in detail, demonstrating that the peptide elicits both CD4+ T-helper and CD8+ CTL responses. Immune monitoring by ELISPOT assay revealed IFN-gamma-producing T cells specific for GV1001 in responding patients. T-cell clones derived from vaccinated patients demonstrated direct cytotoxicity against telomerase-positive tumor cell lines in vitro, confirming the functional relevance of vaccine-induced immunity. Published in Cancer Immunol Immunother 55(12):1564-1574.

Pancreatic Cancer — TeloVac Phase 3 Trial

Middleton G et al. (2014) conducted the definitive Phase 3 trial of GV1001 in pancreatic cancer. The TeloVac trial randomized 1062 patients with locally advanced or metastatic pancreatic cancer to receive gemcitabine/capecitabine alone, concurrent GV1001 with chemotherapy, or sequential GV1001 after chemotherapy. The primary endpoint — overall survival — was not met in the intent-to-treat analysis (median OS: 6.9 months control vs. 6.4 months concurrent GV1001 vs. 8.4 months sequential GV1001). However, the critical secondary finding was that patients who developed GV1001-specific immune responses (approximately 50% of vaccinated patients) had significantly better survival than non-responders. Published in Lancet Oncology, this trial remains the largest randomized study of a telomerase peptide vaccine.

Hepatocellular Carcinoma

GV1001 has been investigated in early-phase trials for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), where telomerase is reactivated in the majority of tumors during hepatocarcinogenesis. The peptide showed immunogenicity in HCC patients, and GV1001-specific T cell responses correlated with disease stabilization in a subset of patients. GemVax & KAEL continues development of GV1001 for HCC in Asian markets.

Alzheimer's Disease — Clinical Evidence

Park HH et al. (2022) reported results from a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial of GV1001 in patients with moderate-to-severe Alzheimer's disease conducted in South Korea. Patients receiving GV1001 showed significant improvement on the Severe Impairment Battery (SIB) cognitive scale compared to placebo. The treatment was well-tolerated with no serious adverse events attributed to GV1001. Biomarker analysis suggested reduced neuroinflammation markers in the GV1001 group. This study represents the first clinical evidence that a telomerase-derived peptide can improve cognition in a neurodegenerative disease through mechanisms independent of cancer immunity.

Anti-Inflammatory Mechanism

Kim BK et al. (2023) elucidated the molecular mechanism underlying GV1001's anti-inflammatory effects. Using vascular endothelial cells and macrophages, they demonstrated that GV1001 enters cells via its amphipathic structure, binds HSP90 and HSP70 in the cytoplasm, and prevents HSP-mediated stabilization of the IKK complex. This results in reduced IkBalpha phosphorylation and degradation, preventing NF-kB p65 nuclear translocation and suppressing transcription of pro-inflammatory cytokines. The study showed dose-dependent reduction of TNF-alpha (60-80%), IL-6 (50-70%), and IL-1beta (40-60%) in LPS-stimulated cells.

Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer

Brunsvig PF et al. (2006) reported Phase I/II results of GV1001 in 26 patients with advanced NSCLC. GV1001 (0.1-0.9 mg) was administered intradermally with GM-CSF at days 1, 3, 5, 8, 15, 22, and monthly thereafter. Immune responses were detected in 11 of 24 evaluable patients (46%). Immune responders showed a non-significant trend toward improved survival. The safety profile was favorable, with injection site reactions as the most common adverse event. No dose-limiting toxicities were observed.

Safety Profile

GV1001 has an extensive clinical safety database from Phase 1-3 trials enrolling over 1000 patients:

  • Injection site reactions: Most common adverse event; mild erythema, induration, and pruritus at the intradermal injection site. Typically self-resolving within 24-48 hours.
  • Systemic immune activation: Low-grade fever (10-15% of patients), fatigue, and myalgia — expected pharmacodynamic effects of immune stimulation. Grade 3-4 immune-related adverse events are rare (<2%).
  • Autoimmune risk: Despite targeting the self-antigen hTERT, no clinically significant autoimmune toxicity has been reported across all trials. Normal cells express insufficient hTERT for immune recognition.
  • Hematological safety: No significant bone marrow toxicity despite telomerase expression in hematopoietic stem cells. Complete blood count monitoring in clinical trials has not revealed cytopenias attributable to GV1001.
  • Alzheimer's safety: In the Park et al. (2022) RCT, GV1001 was well-tolerated in elderly patients with dementia. No serious adverse events were attributed to the peptide.
  • Drug interactions: In the TeloVac trial, GV1001 was combined with gemcitabine/capecitabine without unexpected additive toxicity. Chemotherapy may impair immune response generation but does not increase GV1001 toxicity.
  • Long-term safety: Patients receiving GV1001 with monthly boosters for >12 months in Phase I/II studies did not develop cumulative toxicity or delayed autoimmune phenomena.

Pharmacokinetic Profile

Half-life
Short (minutes to hours in serum); immune response persists weeks to months
Distribution
Following intradermal injection, GV1001 distributes locally to dendritic cells and draining lymph nodes (vaccine function). Following subcutaneous injection, systemic distribution enables anti-inflammatory effects across tissues including the CNS

Quick Start

Route
Intradermal (cancer vaccine), Subcutaneous (Alzheimer's)

Molecular Structure

2D Structure
GV1001 molecular structure
Molecular Properties
Formula
C85H146N26O21
Weight
1868.2 Da
CAS
869744-49-2
PubChem CID
56843375
Exact Mass
1867.1156 Da
LogP
-7.6
TPSA
779 Ų
H-Bond Donors
25
H-Bond Acceptors
26
Rotatable Bonds
60
Complexity
3910
Identifiers (SMILES, InChI)
InChI
InChI=1S/C85H146N26O21/c1-12-47(8)65(81(130)111-38-22-30-63(111)78(127)102-56(82(131)132)25-16-17-33-86)108-75(124)60(42-51-23-14-13-15-24-51)106-71(120)53(26-18-34-94-83(88)89)99-72(121)58(40-45(4)5)104-70(119)54(27-19-35-95-84(90)91)100-76(125)61(43-112)107-79(128)66(50(11)113)109-74(123)59(41-46(6)7)105-73(122)57(39-44(2)3)103-68(117)49(10)98-77(126)62-29-21-37-110(62)80(129)55(28-20-36-96-85(92)93)101-67(116)48(9)97-69(118)52(87)31-32-64(114)115/h13-15,23-24,44-50,52-63,65-66,112-113H,12,16-22,25-43,86-87H2,1-11H3,(H,97,118)(H,98,126)(H,99,121)(H,100,125)(H,101,116)(H,102,127)(H,103,117)(H,104,119)(H,105,122)(H,106,120)(H,107,128)(H,108,124)(H,109,123)(H,114,115)(H,131,132)(H4,88,89,94)(H4,90,91,95)(H4,92,93,96)/t47-,48-,49-,50+,52-,53-,54-,55-,56-,57-,58-,59-,60-,61-,62-,63-,65-,66-/m0/s1
InChIKeyWZJRQXZSYQYFJV-QAXVQDKQSA-N

Research Indications

Oncology

Moderate Evidence
Pancreatic cancer

Phase I/II trials showed GV1001 induces immune responses correlating with prolonged survival in non-resectable pancreatic cancer. Phase III TeloVac trial evaluated combination with gemcitabine/capecitabine.

Moderate Evidence
Non-small cell lung cancer

Phase I/II study achieved immune response in 16/20 evaluable NSCLC patients with persisting responses in 13 subjects. High immunologic response rate without prior HLA typing required.

Emerging
Metastatic colorectal cancer

Phase II trial combining GV1001 with chemotherapy showed 90.9% disease control rate and 34.1% objective response rate, though immune responses were modest.

Emerging
Hepatocellular carcinoma

Phase II open-label trial evaluated safety and efficacy of telomerase peptide vaccination in advanced HCC patients.

Emerging
Anti-angiogenic activity

GV1001 demonstrates inhibition of VEGF/VEGFR-2 signaling pathways, providing an additional anti-tumor mechanism beyond immune activation.

Research Protocols

subcutaneous Injection

Administered via subcutaneous injection.

GoalDoseFrequency
Long-term safetySee literatureMonthly
Maintenance phase0.56 mgMonthly
Brunsvig et al. (2006)0.9 mgPer protocol
Bernhardt et al. (2006)1.4 mgPer protocol

intradermal Injection

Cancer vaccine mechanism: When administered intradermally with GM-CSF adjuvant, GV1001 is taken up by dendritic cells at the injection site. GV1001 (0.1-0.9 mg) was administered intradermally with GM-CSF at days 1, 3, 5, 8, 15, 22, and monthly thereafter.

GoalDoseFrequency
TeloVac Phase III (ISRCTN4382138)0.56 mg, 75 mcg, 1000 mg, 830 mgTwice daily
NSCLC Phase I/II2.8 mg, 75 mcgMonthly
Induction phase0.56 mg, 75 mcgPer protocol
Immune monitoring0.1 mgPer protocol

Interactions

Peptide Interactions

Immune Checkpoint Inhibitorscompatible

Preclinical and early clinical investigations have explored combining GV1001 with immune checkpoint inhibitors (anti-PD-1, anti-CTLA-4). The rationale is that GV1001 primes tumor-specific T cells, while checkpoint inhibitors remove the immunosuppressive brakes that limit T-cell effector function ...

What to Expect

What to Expect

Days 1-3

Typically self-resolving within 24-48 hours.

Month 4-6

RCT have been disclosed in regulatory filings Duration: 24-week treatment period with cognitive assessments (ADAS-cog, SIB, MMSE, CDR-SB) at...

Month 6-9

The primary endpoint — overall survival — was not met in the intent-to-treat analysis (median OS: 6.9 months control vs.

Ongoing

Continued use as directed

Quality Indicators

What to look for

  • Phase 3 clinical trial data available
  • Human clinical trials conducted
  • Well-established safety profile
  • Multiple peer-reviewed studies available

Caution

  • Injection site reactions reported

Red flags

  • Significant side effect risk noted
  • Potential carcinogenicity concerns

Frequently Asked Questions

References (6)

  1. [4]
  2. [5]
  3. [1]
  4. [3]
    Kim BK et al GV1001 inhibits NF-kB signaling and ameliorates vascular inflammation Biochem Biophys Res Commun (2023)
  5. [2]
    Park HH et al GV1001 ameliorates cognitive decline in Alzheimer's disease Alzheimers Res Ther (2022)
  6. [6]
    Ko YJ et al GV1001 reduces neuronal cell death and amyloid-beta toxicity via interaction with extracellular heat shock proteins Exp Neurobiol (2022)
Updated 2026-03-08Reviewed by Tides Research Team6 citationsSources: peptide-wiki-mdx, pubchem, peptide-wiki-mdx-v2

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