CM101 Treatment Overrides Tumor-induced Immunoprivilege Leading to Apoptosis
2000
CM101, a bacterial polysaccharide exotoxin produced by group B
Streptococcus (GBS), also referred to as GBS toxin, has
been shown to target pathological neovasculature and activate
complement (C3), thereby inducing neovascularitis, infiltration of
inflammatory cells, inhibition of tumor growth, and apoptosis in murine
tumor models. Data from refractory cancer patients in a Phase I
clinical trial with CM101 indicated a similar mechanism of
tumor-targeted inflammation. To further our understanding of the
mechanism of action of CM101 as an antitumor agent, we examined the
role of the inflammatory response in inducing tumor apoptosis in a
normal mouse and tumor-bearing mouse model. The i.v. infusion of CM101
into B16BL-6 melanoma tumor-bearing mice elevated
p53 mRNA in circulating leukocytes as measured by
reverse transcription-PCR, and immunohistochemistry demonstrated
infiltration and sequestration of leukocytes. Whole tumor lysates from
excised tumors exhibited an increase in binding to the murine
p21 Waf1/Cip1 -derived p53 DNA binding sequence
compared with control whole tumor lysates, in which minimal or no DNA
binding was observed. CM101 infusion led to elevated levels of Fas
protein within the tumors as well as a decrease in the expression of
fas ligand (fasL). Furthermore, tumors were apoptotic as determined by
terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated nick end labeling and
DNA fragmentation assays. Collectively, these data suggest that CM101
up-regulates p53 in tumor-infiltrating leukocytes, initiating a loss of
tumor immunoprivilege and consequently rendering the tumor sensitive to
Fas/fasL-mediated apoptosis. CM101 induced loss of tumor
immunoprivilege through changes in the expression of leukocyte p53,
tumor Fas and fasL coupled with neovascularitis and leukocyte
infiltration, constitutes a plausible molecular pathway for tumor
reduction observed in cancer patients.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
50
References
14
Citations
NaN
KQI