Research
Immune System Boosting
UNM Health Sciences Center Researchers Develop Method
To Stimulate Immune System Response Against Cancer And
Infectious Diseases
3-13-1998
Researchers at the University of New Mexico Health Sciences
Center have developed a one-step method to create patient-specific
vaccines against cancers and infectious diseases. These
"customized" vaccines are made by combining
heat shock proteins with tumor antigen proteins obtained
from tumor masses removed from the body.
Heat
shock proteins, also known as HSPs, are found in every
cell of every living organism, from bacteria to plants
to man. Researchers don't totally understand the role
of HSPs within the human body. What is known is that HSPs
act as chaperons, helping to move other proteins from
one part of the cell to another.
Recent
research suggests that HSPs might also serve as a danger signal,
activating the body's immune system response to fight the
cancer. However, HSPs alone can not trigger the immune system.
Instead, HSPs serve as carriers of specific tumor antigens.
The HSPs must be attached to protein antigens from the specific
tumor and transport those proteins to the body's immune cells.
"Our
research team believes that the cancer itself is not the key
problem. All of us may have hundreds of cancers in our lifetime,
but our immune system recognizes these abnormalities and removes
them before they can develop into disease. The problem is
when our immune system is unable to recognize the cancer cells
and is therefore unable to combat the tumor. When heat shock
proteins are combined with protein antigens from a specific
tumor, this enables the body's immune system to recognize
the type of cancer cells and elicit an appropriate immune
response," said Pope Moseley, M.D., chief of the UNM
School of Medicine's Pulmonary, Allergy and Critical Care
Division, within the Department of Internal Medicine. UNM
researchers devised a simple, one-step method to purify the
HSP-tumor antigen protein complex. The tumor-specific vaccine
is synthesized by purifying the HSP-containing fraction of
tumor cells which are limited to the tumor antigens. The protein
complex that is produced, then has the ability to trigger
the desired tumor immune response. UNM is currently seeking
to license this technology.
"There
has been a phenomenal explosion in heat shock protein research.
Cancer immunotherapy is one of the exciting new areas in cancer
research.This technology is suitable for kit applications,
making it possible for any hospital or other setting to conveniently
generate vaccines that naturally occur in a certain type of
tissue or in a specific structure of the body," said
Erik Wallen, M.S., senior research assistant at the UNM School
of Medicine.
This article
has been adapted from a news release issued by University
Of New Mexico, www.unm.edu.
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