Vaccinia CC-36 murine colon oncolysate (VCO) prepared with interleukin-2-gene encoded recombinant vaccinia virus (IL-2VCO) was used in the treatment of a syngeneic murine colon adenocarcinoma (CC-36) hepatic metastasis to test the beneficial effect of the interleukin-2-gene encoded vaccinia virus over a control recombinant vaccinia virus in producing a vaccinia oncolysate tumor cell vaccine. Results suggest that the IL-2VCO treatment significantly reduced the hepatic tumor burden in comparison with the controls that received either IL-2-gene-encoded recombinant vaccinia virus or a plain recombinant vaccinia virus or vaccinia oncolysate prepared with the plain recombinant virus. The survival of mice treated with IL-2VCO was also improved in comparison with mice treated with other preparations. The induction of a cytolytic T lymphocyte response was examined to elucidate the mechanism of the induction of antitumor responses in IL-2VCO-treated mice. Fresh peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) isolated from IL-2VCO-treated mice showed a higher cytolytic activity against CC-36 tumor cell target when compared to PBL from the mice of other treatment groups, suggesting that the IL-2VCO induced an antitumor cytolytic T lymphocyte response. These results suggest that a vaccinia oncolysate, prepared with recombinant vaccinia virus encoding an immunomodulating cytokine gene will enhance antitumor responses in the host.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11038170 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01533517 | DOI Listing |
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