| Literature DB >> 10919636 |
C T Hsu1, C Y Ting, C J Ting, T Y Chen, C P Lin, J Whang-Peng, J Hwang.
Abstract
A method for the preparation of an immunogen containing multiple copies of a self-peptide in linear alignment was designed in order to overcome the difficulty of inducing an immune response to poorly immunogenic peptide antigens. DNA fragments encoding multiple repeats of the self-peptide were generated by a new technique, termed template-repeated polymerase chain reaction (TR-PCR), which could be subcloned into an expression vector for production of peptide repeats as an immunogen. This approach was tested by constructing fusion proteins containing the receptor-binding domain of Pseudomonas exotoxin A and multiple copies of the 10-residue sequence of the peptide hormone gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH). Immunization of female rabbits with the immunogen that contained the exotoxin receptor-binding domain and 12 copies of GnRH (PEIa-GnRH12) resulted in the generation of high-titer antibodies specific for GnRH. Although at equal molar basis of the GnRH moiety, the immunogen that contained single copy of GnRH (PEIa-GnRH1) induced low-titer anti-GnRH antibodies. These observations suggest that the presence of multiple peptide repeats is a key factor in eliciting an immune response. In addition, anti-GnRH antibodies effectively neutralized GnRH activity in vivo, as demonstrated by the degeneration of the ovaries in the injected rabbits. Because anti-GnRH antibody could be functionally analogous to GnRH antagonist, which has been used to treat patients with ovarian cancer, vaccination of PEIa-GnRH12 presents a potential therapeutic application for the treatment of GnRH-sensitive ovarian cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 10919636
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 13.312