| Literature DB >> 27413756 |
M M Soldevilla1, H Villanueva1, F Pastor1.
Abstract
Aptamers are single-chained RNA or DNA oligonucleotides (ODNs) with three-dimensional folding structures which allow them to bind to their targets with high specificity. Aptamers normally show affinities comparable to or higher than that of antibodies. They are chemically synthesized and therefore less expensive to manufacture and produce. A variety of aptamers described to date have been shown to be reliable in modulating immune responses against cancer by either blocking or activating immune receptors. Some of them have been conjugated to other molecules to target the immune system and reduce off-target side effects. Despite the success of first-line treatments against cancer, the elevated number of relapsing cases and the tremendous side effects shown by the commonly used agents hinder conventional treatments against cancer. The advantages provided by aptamers could enhance the therapeutic index of a given strategy and therefore enhance the antitumor effect. Here we recapitulate the provided benefits of aptamers with immunomodulatory activity described to date in cancer therapy and the benefits that aptamer-based immunotherapy could provide either alone or combined with first-line treatments in cancer therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27413756 PMCID: PMC4931050 DOI: 10.1155/2016/1083738
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Immunol Res ISSN: 2314-7156 Impact factor: 4.818
Figure 1Schematic representation of SELEX procedure.
Figure 2Schematic representation of main aptamers used in cancer immunotherapy. (a) OX-40. (b) 4-1BB. (c) CTLA-4. (d) PD1. (e) TIM-3. (f) CD40. (g) DEC205. (h) BAFF-R. (i) IL-6R. (j) IL-6. (k) IL-10R. (l) CD28.
Summary of agonistic and antagonistic aptamers used in cancer immunotherapy.
| Target | Nature | Species | Function | Treatment | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| CTLA-4 | RNA | Murine | Antagonist | Treatment for melanoma tumor | [ |
| TIM-3 | RNA | Murine | Antagonist | Treatment for colon carcinoma in combination with PDL-1 blockade | [ |
| PD1 | DNA | Murine | Antagonist | Treatment for colon carcinoma | [ |
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| IL-10R | RNA | Murine | Antagonist | Treatment for colon carcinoma | [ |
| Human & murine | Not described | Not described | [ | ||
| IL-6 | DNA | Human | Antagonist |
| [ |
| IL-6R | RNA | Human | Delivery | Not described | [ |
| IL-4R | RNA | Human & murine | Antagonist | Treatment for mammary carcinoma | [ |
| TNF- | DNA | Human | Antagonist |
| [ |
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| 4-1BB | RNA | Murine | Agonist | Treatment for mastocytoma tumor | [ |
| Human & murine | Not described | Not described | [ | ||
| OX-40 | RNA | Murine | Agonist | Dendritic cell-based vaccine adjuvant in melanoma tumor | [ |
| Human | Agonist |
| [ | ||
| CD28 | RNA | Murine | Agonist | Idiotypic vaccine adjuvant for B-cell lymphoma tumor | [ |
| Antagonist |
| ||||
| CD40 | RNA | Murine | Agonist | Targeted NMD inhibition in B-cell lymphoma tumor | [ |
| Antagonist | CD40 blockade in B-cell lymphoma tumor | ||||
| DEC205 | RNA | Murine | Agonist | Adoptive transfer adjuvant in B16-OVA melanoma tumor | [ |
| CD16 | RNA | Human | Antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) |
| [ |
| BAFF-R | RNA | Human | Antagonist | Targeted STAT-3 inhibition in mantle cell lymphoma tumor | [ |
Figure 3Bispecific aptamers used to date in cancer immunotherapy. (a) Bispecific aptamer CD28-MRP1. (b) Bispecific aptamer 4-1BB-VEGF. (c) Bispecific aptamer CD16α-c-Met. (d) Bispecific aptamer 4-1BB-PSMA.