Scientific News Health care Therapy of a gene YALE RESEARCHERS DEVELOP NEW MOLECULE THAT ERADICATES CANCER BY DESTROYING TUMOR BLOOD VESSELS
YALE RESEARCHERS DEVELOP NEW MOLECULE THAT
ERADICATES CANCER BY DESTROYING TUMOR BLOOD VESSELS
Researchers at Yale have developed a new molecule
they call "icon" that targets blood vessels in tumors for destruction
by the immune system without harming vessels in normal tissues.
"Our study resulted in the eradication
of injected tumors and also of other tumors in mice that had not been injected,"
said principal investigator Alan Garen, professor of molecular
biophysics and biochemistry at Yale University.
"This serves as a model of metastatic cancer. None of the normal tissues in
the mouse appeared to be harmed by our procedure."
Published in the October 9 issue of
Proceedings of the National
Academy of Sciences, the study was conducted with
human melanoma and prostate tumors growing in mice. The gene for the icon was
inserted into an adenovirus vector that was injected into a tumor, resulting in
the infection of tumor cells that act within the mice as factories for producing
the icon and secreting it into the blood.
Garen said that in order to target tumor blood
vessels without harming the normal blood vessels, a molecule that is expressed
specifically on the inner surface of the tumor is needed. The molecule used for
this study is called tissue factor, whose normal function is to initiate blood
clotting.
Blood clotting occurs when another molecule
called factor VII, which circulates constantly in the blood, binds to tissue
factor. The binding of factor VII to tissue factor is one of the strongest and
most specific interactions known in biology. Garen and Yale research scientist
Zhiwei Hu, constructed the icon, which is modeled after a camel's version of an
antibody. The icon is composed of two parts. One part targets the icon to tissue
factor by using factor VII as the targeting domain. The other part of the icon
is the region of a natural antibody that activates an attack by the immune
system against cells that bind to the icon.
"The result is that the tumor blood vessels
are destroyed by the immune system and consequently the tumor cells die because
they lack a blood supply," said Garen. "The normal blood vessels
survive because they do not express tissue factor and therefore do not bind the
icon."
"This icon should work against all types of
tumors that contain blood vessels," said Garen. "The icon that will be
used in a clinical trial is derived entirely from human components and therefore
should not be significantly immunogenic, which is an advantage over antibodies
used in this kind of study."
Garen said the procedure could also be effective
against other diseases that require growing blood vessels, such as macular
degeneration, the major cause of blindness in older people.
A clinical trial is being arranged by Albert
Deisseroth, M.D., formerly of Yale, and currently President of the Sidney Kimmel
Cancer Center in San Diego.
The study was funded in part by the National
Institutes of Health and by gifts from private
donors.
# # #
Questions, comments, suggestions? Send them
to opa@yale.edu
CONTACT: Karen N. Peart 203-432-1326 #100
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a YALE
Publishing date: November 6, 2001
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