Biological Procedures Online (Feb 2012)

Enhancement of anti-murine colon cancer immunity by fusion of a SARS fragment to a low-immunogenic carcinoembryonic antigen

  • Lin Chen-Si,
  • Kao Shih-Han,
  • Chen Yu-Cheng,
  • Li Chi-Han,
  • Hsieh Yuan-Ting,
  • Yang Shang-Chih,
  • Wu Chang-Jer,
  • Lee Ru-Ping,
  • Liao Kuang-Wen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1480-9222-14-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
p. 2

Abstract

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Abstract Background It is widely understood that tumor cells express tumor-associated antigens (TAAs), of which many are usually in low immunogenicity; for example, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) is specifically expressed on human colon cancer cells and is viewed as a low-immunogenic TAA. How to activate host immunity against specific TAAs and to suppress tumor growth therefore becomes important in cancer therapy development. Results To enhance the immune efficiency of CEA in mice that received, we fused a partial CEA gene with exogenous SARS-CoV fragments. Oral vaccination of an attenuated Salmonella typhimurium strain transformed with plasmids encoding CEA-SARS-CoV fusion gene into BALB/c mice elicited significant increases in TNF-α and IL-10 in the serum. In addition, a smaller tumor volume was observed in CT26/CEA-bearing mice who received CEA-SARS-CoV gene therapy in comparison with those administered CEA alone. Conclusion The administration of fusing CEA-SARS-CoV fragments may provide a promising strategy for strengthening the anti-tumor efficacy against low-immunogenic endogenous tumor antigens.

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