Research
Immune System Disease
Fighting Ability
Cancer Vaccine One Step Closer
2-20-2003
Andreea Ioan-Facsinay from Leiden University Medical Center
has attached proteins from tumour cells to antibodies. With
these she treated immune cells from a mouse. These treated
cells were used to make a vaccine, which was shown to be
effective in animal experiments. If the follow-up research
is successful, vaccines against cancer will become available.
However, that will take at least ten more years.
Vaccines
against cancer are being sought on various fronts. That
is not simple, as unlike the agents that cause most other
diseases, cancer cells originate from within the body. Therefore,
the immune system either does not recognise them or recognises
them too late.
In
principle, Ioan-Facsinay managed to solve this problem for
some types of cancer. She successfully attached material
from the tumour to antibodies. The immune cells from the
mouse were then treated with this complex and injected back
into the mouse. A vaccine was made from these re-injected
cells, which induced an immune response against this cancer
in animal experiments. Certain proteins in the surface of
the immune cells, the so-called Fc receptors, are particularly
important for the effectiveness of this vaccine.
The
vaccine was also found to have a protective effect against
cancer in new mice. Therefore, in principle, the vaccine
can be used for prevention as well as treatment. For example,
such a preventative use would be important for families
with a high incidence of a certain form of cancer.
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Fc receptors also play a role in arthritis and the
immune response to the bacteria which cause whooping cough, as well
as a possible role in allergies. These diseases can probably be treated
or prevented by rendering these receptors invisible or by bombarding
them with antibodies. However, further research is needed for this.
The researcher is optimistic about the possibilities
of this research leading to the production of a vaccine against cancer,
but she remains realistic about this. It will be at least two more
years before experiments can be carried out on humans and then at
least another eight years before there is a commercially available
vaccine.
The research was funded by the Netherlands Organisation
for Scientific Research (NWO).
This story has been adapted from a news release issued
by Netherlands Organization For Scientific Research, www.nwo.nl/nwohome.nsf.
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