Induction of lethal experimental allergic encephalomyelitis in nonhuman primates and guinea pigs with human glioblastoma multiforme tissue
Autor: | Carol J. Wikstrand, Darell D. Bigner, Olin M. Pitts |
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Rok vydání: | 1981 |
Předmět: |
Male
Pathology medicine.medical_specialty Encephalomyelitis Autoimmune Experimental medicine.medical_treatment Encephalomyelitis Central nervous system Freund's Adjuvant Guinea Pigs Cell Line Myelin Antigen medicine Animals Humans biology business.industry Brain Neoplasms Brain Myelin Basic Protein Immunotherapy medicine.disease Neoplasm Proteins Macaca fascicularis medicine.anatomical_structure Freund's adjuvant Immunology biology.protein Female Immunization Antibody business Glioblastoma Adjuvant |
Zdroj: | Journal of neurosurgery. 55(1) |
ISSN: | 0022-3085 |
Popis: | ✓ The introduction of active specific immunotherapy as an adjunct to conventional therapy of the brain-tumor patient creates the risk of the concomitant induction of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE). The lack of resolution concerning the total group of central nervous system (CNS) antigens which may be encephalitogenic, and the lack of definition of the necessary conditions for the induction of an anti-CNS myelin response complicate the design of an immunotherapeutic regimen for brain-tumor patients. We report here the ready induction of EAE in four of four guinea pigs and both of two nonhuman primates (Macaca fascicularis) with human glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) tissue injected with either complete or incomplete Freund's adjuvant (CFA, IFA). Immunization protocols utilizing encephalitogenic GBM tissue and adjuvant which did not result in EAE induction were established in both of two macaques, and the production of significant levels of antibodies specifically reactive with immunizing GBM-derived cultured cell lines in all of 12 macaques without EAE induction was demonstrated. As the lower detection limit of the sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylimide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) assay for human myelin basic protein (HBP) was 0.6 µg HBP/gel, and an extract prepared from WR-GBM tumor tissue contained less than 0.6 µg of detectable HBP/25 µg of pH 3 extractable protein, and as 100 to 1000 µg of purified human basic protein (HBP) failed to induce EAE in three of three macaques, it was hypothesized that 1) GBM tissue may act as an adjuvant and markedly lower myelin basic protein (MBP) threshold doses for EAE induction, that 2) MBP encephalitogenic fragments capable of EAE induction may be present in GBM tissue but difficult to quantitate in precipitates by in vitro methods, or that 3) secondary encephalitogenic antigens unrelated to MBP may be present in GBM tissue. The threat of EAE induction and the potential difficulty of its detection in the deteriorating brain-tumor patient receiving active specific immunotherapy warrants a biological screen in immunizing CNS material in experimental animals prior to administration to patients in immunotherapy protocols. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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