Strategies to endow cytotoxic T lymphocytes or natural killer cells with antibody activity against carcinoembryonic antigen
Autor: | Adel Badran, Hirotomo Shibaguchi, Ken Hachimine, Tetsushi Kinugasa, Jitian Zhang, Masahide Kuroki, Motomu Kuroki |
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Rok vydání: | 2004 |
Předmět: |
Lymphokine-activated killer cell
Chemistry General Medicine Natural killer T cell Tumor antigen Natural killer cell Carcinoembryonic Antigen Killer Cells Natural Interleukin 21 medicine.anatomical_structure NK-92 Neoplasms Immunology Interleukin 12 Cancer research medicine Biomarkers Tumor Humans Binding Sites Antibody Antigen-presenting cell T-Lymphocytes Cytotoxic |
Zdroj: | Tumour biology : the journal of the International Society for Oncodevelopmental Biology and Medicine. 25(4) |
ISSN: | 1010-4283 |
Popis: | Cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) and natural killer (NK) cells are main effecter cells in cellular immunity against tumor cells. T-cell immunotherapy is based on the assumption that tumor(-associated) antigen (TA) peptides are correctly presented by HLA class I molecules on target tumor cells, and NK cell immunotherapy is based on the hypothesis that cell surface TAs or ligands for NK receptors are widely expressed in tumor cells. However, human tumor cells often lose HLA class I molecules, and target cell ligands for NK receptors are not always expressed in human tumor cells. These altered HLA class I phenotypes and non-ubiquitous expression of NK receptor ligands constitute the major tumor escape mechanism facing tumor-specific CTL and/or NK cell mediated responses. These facts also indicate that it is not easy to eliminate the target tumors only by activating tumor-specific CTLs or NK cells with cancer vaccine treatments. On the other hand, it is easily confirmed by immunohistochemistry whether or not antibody-recognized TAs exist on the cell surface of target tumor cells. Therefore, endowing CTLs or NK cells with antigen-binding specificity of anti-TA antibody is a promising approach for re-targeting the activities of these effector cells to tumor cells in an HLA-independent manner. This review summarizes the following four new strategies for re-targeting CTLs or NK cells to carcinoembryonic-antigen-expressing tumor cells: (1) bispecific antibody technology; (2) antibody-cytokine fusion protein technology; (3) chimeric immune receptor technology, and (4) antibody-HLA/peptide complex technology. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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