Literature DB >> 16541123

Combinational adenovirus-mediated gene therapy and dendritic cell vaccine in combating well-established tumors.

Dajing Xia1, Terence Moyana, Jim Xiang.   

Abstract

Recent developments in tumor immunology and biotechnology have made cancer gene therapy and immunotherapy feasible. The current efforts for cancer gene therapy mainly focus on using immunogenes, chemogenes and tumor suppressor genes. Central to all these therapies is the development of efficient vectors for gene therapy. By far, adenovirus (AdV)-mediated gene therapy is one of the most promising approaches, as has confirmed by studies relating to animal tumor models and clinical trials. Dendritic cells (DCs) are highly efficient, specialized antigen-presenting cells, and DC-based tumor vaccines are regarded as having much potential in cancer immunotherapy. Vaccination with DCs pulsed with tumor peptides, lysates, or RNA, or loaded with apoptotic/necrotic tumor cells, or engineered to express certain cytokines or chemokines could induce significant antitumor cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses and antitumor immunity. Although both AdV-mediated gene therapy and DC vaccine can both stimulate antitumor immune responses, their therapeutic efficiency has been limited to generation of prophylactic antitumor immunity against re-challenge with the parental tumor cells or to growth inhibition of small tumors. However, this approach has been unsuccessful in combating well-established tumors in animal models. Therefore, a major strategic goal of current cancer immunotherapy has become the development of novel therapeutic strategies that can combat well-established tumors, thus resembling real clinical practice since a good proportion of cancer patients generally present with significant disease. In this paper, we review the recent progress in AdV-mediated cancer gene therapy and DC-based cancer vaccines, and discuss combined immunotherapy including gene therapy and DC vaccines. We underscore the fact that combined therapy may have some advantages in combating well-established tumors vis-a-vis either modality administered as a monotherapy.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16541123     DOI: 10.1038/sj.cr.7310032

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cell Res        ISSN: 1001-0602            Impact factor:   25.617


  6 in total

1.  Early manifestations of NNK-induced lung cancer: role of lung immunity in tumor susceptibility.

Authors:  Seddigheh Razani-Boroujerdi; Mohan L Sopori
Journal:  Am J Respir Cell Mol Biol       Date:  2006-07-27       Impact factor: 6.914

2.  Chitosan is a surprising negative modulator of cytotoxic CD8+ T cell responses elicited by adenovirus cancer vaccines.

Authors:  Caitlin D Lemke; Jessica B Graham; Sean M Geary; Gideon Zamba; David M Lubaroff; Aliasger K Salem
Journal:  Mol Pharm       Date:  2011-08-09       Impact factor: 4.939

3.  The effect of the PQ1 anti-breast cancer agent on normal tissues.

Authors:  Ying Ding; Keshar Prasain; Thi D T Nguyen; Duy H Hua; Thu Annelise Nguyen
Journal:  Anticancer Drugs       Date:  2012-10       Impact factor: 2.248

4.  Adenoviral vector-based strategies for cancer therapy.

Authors:  Anurag Sharma; Manish Tandon; Dinesh S Bangari; Suresh K Mittal
Journal:  Curr Drug ther       Date:  2009-05-01

5.  Silica promotes the transdifferentiation of rat circulating fibrocytes in vitro.

Authors:  Wu Yao; Suna Liu; Ju Li; Changfu Hao
Journal:  Mol Med Rep       Date:  2015-08-11       Impact factor: 2.952

Review 6.  PEG10 as an oncogene: expression regulatory mechanisms and role in tumor progression.

Authors:  Tian Xie; Shan Pan; Hang Zheng; Zilv Luo; Kingsley M Tembo; Muhammad Jamal; Zhongyang Yu; Yao Yu; Jing Xia; Qian Yin; Meng Wang; Wen Yuan; Qiuping Zhang; Jie Xiong
Journal:  Cancer Cell Int       Date:  2018-08-13       Impact factor: 5.722

  6 in total

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