Search results for "Cytotoxic"

showing 10 items of 1673 documents

Synthetic Glycopeptides from the Mucin Family as Potential Tools in Cancer Immunotherapy

2006

Compared to glycoproteins of healthy cells, glycoproteins of tumor cells are often aberrantly glycosylated. Thus, glycopeptide fragments of surface glycoproteins of tumor cells are of interest as tumor-associated antigens for the distinction between normal and tumor cells. Cancer immunotherapy directed at selectively targeting these tumor-associated glycoprotein structure alterations--deficient glycosylation and, thus, exposure of peptide epitopes which are masked in normal cells--is considered a promising approach for the treatment of cancer. For this purpose, glycoproteins from the mucin family are of particular interest. Mucins belong to a class of heavily O-glycosylated, high-molecular …

Cancer ResearchGlycosylationmedicine.medical_treatmentAntineoplastic AgentsBiologyEpitopechemistry.chemical_compoundCancer immunotherapyAntigenNeoplasmsDrug DiscoverymedicineAnimalsHumansCytotoxic T cellPharmacologychemistry.chemical_classificationMucinGlycopeptidesMucinsImmunotherapy ActiveGlycopeptideOncologyBiochemistrychemistryMultigene FamilyGlycoproteinCurrent Cancer Drug Targets
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Apoptotic effects of thiazolobenzimidazole derivatives on sensitive and multidrug resistant leukaemic cells

2001

We investigated the cytotoxic activity of eight thiazolobenzimidazole derivatives on sensitive HL60 and multidrug-resistant (MDR) (HL60R) leukaemia cell lines. The antitumour effects of these compounds were compared with those of RS-TBZ, a thiazolobenzimidazole derivative, previously described in our reports, that was able to induce apoptosis more markedly in MDR cells than in the parental sensitive cell lines. Only two compounds in this study proved to have interesting effects: (a) the S-enantiomer of TBZ, that was able to induce apoptosis in MDR cells in a slightly more selective manner than TBZ (racemic form); and (b) TBZ-4-OCH3 (TBZ-4-OCH3), that showed cytotoxic and apoptotic effects o…

Cancer ResearchHL60Antineoplastic AgentsHL-60 CellsApoptosisBiologyMultidrug resistanceCaspase 8Anticancer drugschemistry.chemical_compoundAntigenCytotoxic T cellHumansLeukaemiafas ReceptorProgenitor cellLeukemiaCell CycleCaspase InhibitorsDrug Resistance MultipleMultiple drug resistanceThiazolobenzimidazoleThiazolesAnticancer drugs; Apoptosis; Leukaemia; Multidrug resistance; Thiazolobenzimidazole;OncologychemistryCell cultureApoptosisDrug Resistance NeoplasmImmunologyCancer researchBenzimidazoles
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Highly specific auto-antibodies against claudin-18 isoform 2 induced by a chimeric HBcAg virus-like particle vaccine kill tumor cells and inhibit the…

2011

Abstract Strategies for antibody-mediated cancer immunotherapy, such as active immunization with virus-like particle (VLP)-based vaccines, are gaining increasing attention. We developed chimeric hepatitis B virus core antigen (HBcAg)-VLPs that display a surface epitope of the highly selective tumor-associated cell lineage marker claudin-18 isoform 2 (CLDN18.2) flanked by a mobility-increasing linker. Auto-antibodies elicited by immunization with these chimeric HBcAg-VLPs in 2 relevant species (mouse and rabbit) bind with high precision to native CLDN18.2 at physiologic densities on the surface of living cells but not to the corresponding epitope of the CLDN18.1 splice variant that differs b…

Cancer ResearchHepatitis B virusLung Neoplasmsmedicine.medical_treatmentMolecular Sequence DataCHO CellsAdenocarcinomaActive immunizationCancer VaccinesEpitopeMiceCricetulusAntigenVirus-like particleCancer immunotherapyAntibody SpecificityStomach NeoplasmsCell Line TumorCricetinaemedicineAnimalsHumansProtein IsoformsAmino Acid SequenceVaccines Virus-Like ParticleAutoantibodiesMice Inbred BALB Cbiologybusiness.industryAntibody-Dependent Cell CytotoxicityMembrane ProteinsVirologyMolecular biologyHepatitis B Core AntigensHBcAgHEK293 CellsOncologyCell cultureClaudinsbiology.proteinRabbitsAntibodybusinessCancer research
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Abstract A004: Systemic RNA vaccines: Connecting effective cancer immunotherapy with antiviral defense mechanisms

2016

Abstract Mechanisms of antiviral host defense are important for survival and evolutionarily optimized for high sensitivity and potency. Intending to harvest the multitude of highly specialized and intertwined pathogen immune defense programs for cancer immunotherapy, we simulated a systemic pathogen intrusion into the blood stream by intravenous injection of lipid-formulated, tumor antigen-encoding mRNA nanoparticles. These RNA-lipoplexes (RNA-LPX) were directed to various lymphoid tissues, including the spleen, lymph nodes and bone marrow, which provide the ideal microenvironment for efficient priming and amplification of T cell responses. Solely the RNA-to-lipid ratio was discovered to de…

Cancer ResearchInnate immune systemmedicine.medical_treatmentT cellImmunologyTLR7Biologymedicine.anatomical_structureCancer immunotherapyAntigenImmunologymedicineCytotoxic T cellAntigen-presenting cellCD8Cancer Immunology Research
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Peptide-specific CD8+ T-cell evolutionin vivo: Response to peptide vaccination with Melan-A/MART-1

2002

Monitoring of CD8+ T-cell responses in cancer patients during peptide vaccination is essential to provide useful surrogate markers and to demonstrate vaccine efficacy. We have longitudinally followed CD8+ T-cell responses in 3 melanoma patients who were immunized with peptides derived from Melan-A/MART-1. Recombinant HLA-A2 tetramers loaded with the naturally presented Melan-A/MART-1 nonamer peptide (AAGIGILTV) and the Melan-A/MART-1 analog (ELAGIGILTV) were used in combination with phenotypical analysis for different T-cell subsets including naive T cells, effector T cells, "true memory" T cells and "memory effector" T cells, based on CD45RA/RO and CCR7-expression. At least in a single pat…

Cancer ResearchInterleukin 21OncologyAntigenImmunologyCytotoxic T cellIL-2 receptorBiologyNatural killer T cellCD8EpitopeInterleukin 3International Journal of Cancer
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2004

Cancer ResearchInterleukin 21OncologyChemistryZAP70GeneticsCD28Cytotoxic T cellIL-2 receptorNatural killer T cellAntigen-presenting cellJurkat cellsCell biologyCancer Cell International
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miR-155expression in antitumor immunity: The higher the better?

2019

MicroRNAs are small noncoding RNAs that modulate gene expression either directly, by impairing the stability and/or translation of transcripts that contain their specific target sequence, or indirectly through the targeting of transcripts that encode transcription factors, factors implicated in signal transduction pathways, or epigenetic regulators. Abnormal expression of micro-RNAs has been found in nearly all types of pathologies, including cancers. MiR-155 has been the first microRNA to be implicated in the regulation of the innate and adaptative immune responses, and its expression is either increased or decreased in a variety of liquid and solid malignancies. In this review, we examine…

Cancer ResearchLeukemiaCarcinogenesisBiologymiR-155MicroRNAs03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineImmune system030220 oncology & carcinogenesisGene expressionmicroRNAGeneticsCancer researchAnimalsHumansCytotoxic T cellTumor EscapeImmunotherapyEpigeneticsDown SyndromeSignal transductionTranscription factorGenes, Chromosomes and Cancer
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Cytolytic T cell reactivity against melanoma-associated differentiation antigens in peripheral blood of melanoma patients and healthy individuals

1996

Antigenic peptides derived from several differentiation antigens of the melanocyte lineage were recently identified in human melanomas as targets for HLA-A2.1-restricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs). To examine their potential role in tumour-directed immune responses in vivo, we determined CTL reactivity against seven antigenic peptides derived from the Melan A/MART-1, tyrosinase and gp100/Pmel17 antigens in the peripheral blood of 10 HLA-A2+ healthy controls and 26 HLA-A2+ melanoma patients. The influenza matrix peptide (GILGFVFTL) presented by HLA-A2.1 was used as a control peptide. CTL reactivity was assessed in a mixed lymphocyte 'peptide' culture assay. Reactivity against Melan A/MAR…

Cancer ResearchLymphocyte10050 Institute of Pharmacology and Toxicology610 Medicine & healthDermatologyPeripheral blood mononuclear cell2708 DermatologyMART-1 AntigenImmune systemMelanocyte differentiationAntigenAntigens NeoplasmTumor Cells CulturedmedicineHumansCytotoxic T cell1306 Cancer ResearchAmino Acid SequenceMelanomaneoplasmsMembrane GlycoproteinsMonophenol Monooxygenasebusiness.industryMelanomaProteinsmedicine.diseaseAntigens DifferentiationNeoplasm ProteinsCTL*medicine.anatomical_structureOncologyImmunology570 Life sciences; biology2730 OncologybusinessT-Lymphocytes Cytotoxicgp100 Melanoma AntigenMelanoma Research
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Cellular immune response to human renal-cell carcinomas: Definition of a common antigen recognized by HLA-A2-restricted cytotoxic T-Lymphocyte (CTL) …

1994

Cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) clones directed against autologous renal-cell carcinoma (RCC) cell lines were generated by mixed lymphocyte/tumor-cell culture (MLTC) using peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL). A CD8+, CD4- CTL clone MZ1257-CTL 5/30 with high cytolytic activity for the autologous tumor cell line MZ1257-RCC was established. No lysis of the autologous EBV-transformed B lymphocytes (EBV-B) or K562 cells was observed. A panel of HLA-A2-matched allogeneic RCC lines was recognized by CTL 5/30. Further specificity analysis showed a cross-reactivity with HLA-A2-matched allogeneic tumor cells of various origins, especially melanoma. CTL 5/30 was also cross-reactive with several HLA-A2-pos…

Cancer ResearchLymphocyteCross ReactionsBiologyKidneyImmune systemAntigenAntigens NeoplasmHLA-A2 AntigenTumor Cells CulturedmedicineHumansCytotoxic T cellCarcinoma Renal CellMelanomaImmunity CellularHistocompatibility Antigens Class IAntibodies MonoclonalT lymphocyteAntigens DifferentiationAutologous tumor cellKidney NeoplasmsCTL*medicine.anatomical_structureOncologyImmunologyLymphocyte Culture Test MixedClone (B-cell biology)T-Lymphocytes CytotoxicInternational Journal of Cancer
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In vivo targeting of human neutralizing antibodies against CD55 and CD59 to lymphoma cells increases the antitumor activity of rituximab.

2007

AbstractAn in vivo model of human CD20+ B-lymphoma was established in severe combined immunodeficiency mice to test the ability of human neutralizing miniantibodies to CD55 and CD59 (MB55 and MB59) to enhance the therapeutic effect of rituximab. The miniantibodies contained single-chain fragment variables and the hinge-CH2-CH3 domains of human IgG1. LCL2 cells were selected for the in vivo study among six B-lymphoma cell lines for their high susceptibility to rituximab-dependent complement-mediated killing enhanced by MB55 and MB59. The cells injected i.p. primarily colonized the liver and spleen, leading to the death of the animals within 30 to 40 days. Thirty percent of mice receiving bio…

Cancer ResearchLymphoma B-Cellmedicine.drug_classmedicine.medical_treatmentAntineoplastic AgentsCD59 AntigensAntigens CD59Mice SCIDPharmacologyMonoclonal antibodyAntigens CD55Antineoplastic AgentAntibodies Monoclonal Murine-DerivedMicerituximabIn vivomedicineAnimalsHumansantibodies against CD55 and CD59CD20Severe combined immunodeficiencyMice Inbred BALB CbiologyCD55 AntigensAnimalAntibody-Dependent Cell CytotoxicityAntibodies MonoclonalImmunotherapyrituximab; antibodies against CD55 and CD59medicine.diseaseDisease Models AnimalOncologyAnimals; Antibodies Monoclonal; Antibodies Monoclonal Murine-Derived; Antibody-Dependent Cell Cytotoxicity; Antigens CD55; Antigens CD59; Antineoplastic Agents; Disease Models Animal; Female; Humans; Lymphoma B-Cell; Mice; Mice Inbred BALB C; Mice SCID; Rituximab; Cancer Research; OncologyMonoclonalImmunologybiology.proteinRituximabFemaleAntibodymedicine.drugHuman
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