Inhibition of tumor angiogenesis in lung cancer by T4 phage surface displaying mVEGFR2 vaccine |
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Authors: | Ren Shunxiang Fengyu Zuo Shuguang Zhao Minyi Wang Xiaobin Wang Xicai Chen Yan Wu Zhiping Ren Zhaojun |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Clinical Pharmacy, China Pharmaceutical University, Nanjing 210009, China b Expression BioSciences LLC, 801 Montrose Avenue, South Plainfield, NJ 07080, USA c Laboratory Animal Center, Southeast University, Nanjing 210009, China d Tumor Institute of Yunnan Province, Kunming 650118, China |
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Abstract: | Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) has been known as a potential vasculogenic and angiogenic factor and its receptor (VEGFR2) is a major receptor to response to the angiogenic activity of VEGF. The technique that to break the immune tolerance of “self-antigens” associated with angiogenesis is an attractive approach for cancer therapy with T4 phage display system. In this experiment, mouse VEGFR2 was constructed on T4 phage nanometer-particle surface as a recombinant vaccine. T4-mVEGFR2 recombinant vaccine was identified by PCR and western blot assay. Immunotherapy with T4-mVEGFR2 was confirmed by protective immunity against Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC) in mice. The antibody against mVEGFR2 was detected by ELISPOT, ELISA and Dot ELISA. The inhibitive effects against angiogenesis were studied using CD31 and CD105 via histological analysis. VEGF-mediated endothelial cells proliferation and tube formation were inhibited in vitro by immunoglobulin induced by T4-mVEGFR2. The antitumor activity was substantiated from the adoptive transfer of the purified immunoglobulin. Antitumor activity and autoantibody production of mVEGFR2 could be neutralized by the depletion of CD4+T lymphocytes. These studies strongly suggest that T4-mVEGFR2 recombinant vaccine might be a promising antitumor approach. |
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Keywords: | Bacteriophage T4 VEGFR2 Self-immunization Cancer therapy |
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