Research
Immune System Boosting
DNA-Based Cancer Vaccine Shows Promise To Successfully
Treat Melanoma In Mice
9-15-1998
New York -- Over the past decade, knowledge about how
the immune system can be used to fight cancer has greatly
increased. Not only have scientists learned that the
immune system can recognize certain proteins on cancer
cells, but they have used this knowledge to develop
a vaccine that may help to prevent cancer recurrence.
Now,
scientists at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center
in New York have shown that a new DNA-based cancer vaccine
can successfully treat the deadly skin cancer, melanoma,
in mice. The investigators, who report their findings
in the September 15 issue of the Journal of Clinical
Investigation, used a "needleless syringe"
called a gene gun to drive tiny particles of human DNA
at high speed into the mice's skin. The human protein
differed just enough from its mouse counterpart to trick
the immune system into producing a powerful immune attack.
The immune cells attacked both the melanoma cells and
the pigment cells in the skin of the mice, which share
a protein called gp75 that is not found in other tissues.
"Our
study shows how we can use DNA immunization to make
the immune system recognize and attack cancer cells,"
said Dr. Alan Houghton, Chief of the Clinical Immunology
Service at Memorial Sloan-Kettering and senior author
of the study. The same strategy for developing a cancer
vaccine is being tested against prostate, breast and
lymphoma cancers in mice, as they also share specific
proteins with their normal cell counterparts.
"These
DNA vaccines are unique because they can trigger immunity where
other types of vaccines can fail to stimulate an immune response,"
added Dr. Houghton, noting that the cancer vaccine is easy to
make, handle and store.
The
mice were immunized with human DNA via a novel delivery system
called a gene gun, in which microscopic gold particles were coated
with the human DNA and injected into the mice's skin using a burst
of helium gas. Once inside the skin cells, the DNA [cancer vaccine]
triggered an immune response.
In
the cancer vaccine study, Dr. Houghton and his research team attempted
to induce an immune attack by using the gene gun to immunize the
mice with either a purified form of mouse DNA, or the human DNA.
When the investigators later examined the lungs of the mice, they
found that the tumors were widespread in those who had received
the mouse DNA and could not detect an immune response.
However,
the tumors had regressed by 86 percent in the mice injected with
human DNA and the researchers found a marked immune response to
this form of cancer vaccine.
In
addition to the cancer vaccine inducing an immune attack in the
mice, the researchers found that the human DNA also caused autoimmunity,
or a condition that occurs when the immune system attacks the
body's own cells. The condition, called vitiligo in humans, caused
white patches to develop on the mice's otherwise dark coats of
fur. Vitiligo occasionally develops in melanoma patients and may
be indicative of a good outcome.
"Our
goal was to induce a very controlled autoimmune response that
would lead to protection against tumor spreading," said Dr.
Houghton, a pioneer in the field of melanoma research and cancer
vaccines. "The human DNA induced an autoimmune response that
prevented the tumor from spreading, and as a side effect, destroyed
pigment cells."
Although
immunologists know that autoimmunity can accompany an immune response,
Dr. Houghton's team found that the mechanisms involved in immune
responses against tumors versus autoimmunity against normal tissues
were quite different.
"This
means that we may be able to vaccinate a patient against melanoma,
which would induce an immune response against the tumor while,
at the same time, block any autoimmunity from ever occurring,"
explained Dr. Houghton.
Dr.
Houghton's research team plans to begin clinical trials on this
cancer vaccine using DNA from mice in melanoma patients some time
next year.
Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center is the world's oldest and largest
institution devoted to prevention, patient care, research, and
education in cancer. Throughout its long, distinguished history,
the Center has played a leadership role in defining the standards
of care for patients with cancer. In 1998, Memorial Sloan-Kettering
was named the nation's best cancer center for the sixth consecutive
year by U.S. News & World Report.
This
article on a cancer vaccine has been adapted from a news release
issued by Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, www.mskcc.org.
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