Plasma membrane vesicles isolated from tumor cells can be incorporated onto 5-microns diameter microspheres and antigen in this form, termed large multivalent immunogen (LMI), augments generation of tumor-specific cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) responses in vivo. Treatment of mice with LMI at the time of challenge with tumor significantly reduced growth of several tumors in their syngeneic hosts. Our report describes the effects of LMI on established progressing tumors, including P815 solid tumor and two fibrosarcomas in a lung-metastasis model. Treatment of mice bearing established tumors (7 to 12 days) with LMI alone did not significantly reduce tumor growth or extend host survival, but highly synergistic effects of combined treatment with cyclophosphamide (Cy) and LMI were found. Cy alone reduced the size of P815 solid tumors, but within a few days, the tumors began to grow progressively, and survival was only marginally extended. However, Cy followed 2 to 3 days later by a single injection of LMI resulted in prolonged reduction of tumor growth and significant extension of survival; in some experiments, tumors became undetectable in the majority of treated mice, and the mice survived indefinitely. Essentially the same results were obtained in experiments examining survival of mice bearing established MCA-203 fibrosarcoma. LMIs were uniquely effective in acting synergistically with Cy; antigen in the form of irradiated tumor cells or plasma membrane in adjuvant were ineffective, and free plasma-membrane antigen (not on microspheres) had only marginal effects. There has been considerable interest in the possibility of using tumor antigen to enhance tumor-specific immune responses, and clinical trials using this approach are showing some promise. The results described here suggest that altering the form of antigen by purifying plasma membranes and incorporating them onto microspheres might significantly improve the efficacy of tumor immunotherapy with antigen.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00002371-199603000-00003 | DOI Listing |
Eur J Pharmacol
January 2025
Université Paris-Est, Immunorégulation et Biothérapie, INSERM U955, Hôpital Henri Mondor, 94010 Créteil, France; AP-HP, Groupe hospitalo-universitaire Chenevier Mondor, Centre d'investigation clinique Biotherapie, F-94010 Creteil, France. Electronic address:
Pancreatic cancer (PCa) is one of the most devastating cancers with few clinical signs and no truly effective therapy. In recent years, our team has demonstrated that nucleolin antagonists such as N6L could be a therapeutic alternative for this disease. In order to study a possible clinic development of N6L (multivalent pseudopeptide), we undertook to study the effect of combination of N6L with chemotherapies classically used for PCa on the survival of pancreatic cancer cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Inorg Biochem
January 2025
College of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, China University of Petroleum (East China), Qingdao 266580, China. Electronic address:
Developing multifunctional nanomedicines represents a frontier. We have engineered a high-capacity DNA vector basing rolling circle amplification for the delivery of copper sulfide nanoparticles (CuS NPs) and doxorubicin (DOX), coupled with multivalent aptamers (MA) that precisely target tumors, culminating in a multifunctional nanoplatform (RMALCu@DOX), which combines the chemotherapy (CT)/photothermal therapy (PTT)/chemodynamic therapy (CDT). The vector (RMAL) boasts exceptional biocompatibility and incorporates multiple copy units, enabling the precise loading of numerous CuS NPs, forming RMALCu which possesses a robust photothermal effect and superior Fenton-like catalytic activity, heralding a project of minimally invasive dual-mode (PTT/CDT) therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChem Mater
January 2025
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, University of California, Berkeley, California 94704, United States.
Multivalent-ion batteries offer an alternative to Li-based technologies, with the potential for greater sustainability, improved safety, and higher energy density, primarily due to their rechargeable system featuring a passivating metal anode. Although a system based on the Ca/Ca couple is particularly attractive given the low electrochemical plating potential of Ca, the remaining challenge for a viable rechargeable Ca battery is to identify Ca cathodes with fast ion transport. In this work, a high-throughput computational pipeline is adapted to (1) discover novel Ca cathodes in a largely unexplored space of "empty intercalation hosts" and (2) develop material design rules for Ca-ion mobility.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
January 2025
State Key Laboratory of Solid Lubrication, Lanzhou Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Lanzhou 730000, China.
Synovial exudation, creeping, and lubrication failure in natural cartilage under a long-term normal loading can be counteracted by a tribo-rehydration (sliding-induced rehydration) phenomenon. Hydrogels, as porous materials, can also restore interfacial lubrication and overcome creep through this strategy. At appropriate sliding velocities, water molecules at the interface contact inlet are driven by hydrodynamic pressures into the porous network to resist creep extrusion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntrinsically disordered proteins or regions (IDPs/IDRs) adopt diverse binding modes with different partners, ranging from ordered to multivalent to fuzzy conformations in the bound state. Characterizing IDR interfaces is challenging experimentally and computationally. Alphafold-multimer and Alphafold3, the state-of-the-art structure prediction methods, are less accurate at predicting IDR binding sites at their benchmarked confidence cutoffs.
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