Immunotherapy of tumors with xenogeneic endothelial cells as a vaccine

Y Wei, Q Wang, X Zhao, L Yang, L Tian, Y Lu, B Kang… - Nature medicine, 2000 - nature.com
Y Wei, Q Wang, X Zhao, L Yang, L Tian, Y Lu, B Kang, C Lu, M Huang, Y Lou, F Xiao, Q He…
Nature medicine, 2000nature.com
The breaking of immune tolerance against autologous angiogenic endothelial cells should
be a useful approach for cancer therapy. Here we show that immunotherapy of tumors using
fixed xenogeneic whole endothelial cells as a vaccine was effective in affording protection
from tumor growth, inducing regression of established tumors and prolonging survival of
tumor-bearing mice. Furthermore, autoreactive immunity targeting to microvessels in solid
tumors was induced and was probably responsible for the anti-tumor activity. These …
Abstract
The breaking of immune tolerance against autologous angiogenic endothelial cells should be a useful approach for cancer therapy. Here we show that immunotherapy of tumors using fixed xenogeneic whole endothelial cells as a vaccine was effective in affording protection from tumor growth, inducing regression of established tumors and prolonging survival of tumor-bearing mice. Furthermore, autoreactive immunity targeting to microvessels in solid tumors was induced and was probably responsible for the anti-tumor activity. These observations may provide a new vaccine strategy for cancer therapy through the induction of an autoimmune response against the tumor endothelium in a cross-reaction.
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