Cellular Physiology and Biochemistry (Mar 2015)
Cloning and Expression of a Novel Target Fusion Protein and its Application in Anti-Tumor Therapy
Abstract
Backgrounds: Epidermal growth factor (EGF) is a 53 amino acid polypeptide and its receptor EGFR is an established therapeutic target for anti-tumor therapy. Two major categories of EGFR-targeted drugs include monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) and small molecular tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs). However, drug resistance occurs in a significant proportion of patients due to EGFR mutations. Since EGFR can maintain activation while abrogating the activity of mAbs or TKIs, or bypass signaling functions while successfully circumventing the EGF-EGFR switch, developing new mechanism-based inhibitors is necessary. Methods: In this study, based on the principle of tumor immunotherapy, a recombinant protein pLLO-hEGF was constructed. The N-terminal portion contains three immunodominant epitopes from listeriolysin O (LLO) and the C-terminal includes EGF. To use EGF as a target vector to recognize EGFR-expressing cancer cells, immunodominant epitopes could enhance immunogenicity of tumor cells for immune cell activation and attack. Results: Recombinant protein pLLO-hEGF was successfully expressed and showed strong affinity to cancer cells. Also, pLLO-hEGF could significantly stimulate human lymphocyte proliferation and the lymphocytes demonstrated enhanced killing potency in EGFR-expressing cancer cells in vitro and in vivo. Conclusion: This study can provide novel strategies and directions in tumor biotherapy.
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