New Role For Immune System Player May Help Improve Cancer Vaccines
Researchers have discovered that a molecule best
known for its anti-microbial properties also has the ability to activate
key cells in the immune response. This newly discovered function,
reported in the Nov. 1, 2002, issue of Science, suggests the molecule, a
peptide called ß-defensin 2, may be useful in the development of more
effective cancer vaccines. Scientists have found that ß-defensin 2
initiates a chain of events leading to the growth and multiplication of
T cells, components of the immune system that recognize and kill foreign
cells that have invaded the body.
Defensins are known to be an important component of the body's
immediate response to infection. ß-defensin 2 attacks and destroys a
broad range of bacteria as part of the innate immune system, the body's
first line of defense against such infections.
The new finding links ß-defensin 2 to the second arm of the immune
system, adaptive immunity. The adaptive immune response combats
pathogens that evade the body's initial defense mechanisms. Unlike
innate immunity, the adaptive immune system develops specifically in
response to an infection, changing as needed to ward off each invader.
"This link between the innate and adaptive immune systems is
important for our understanding of the body's ability to detect
infection," said Arya Biragyn, Ph.D., National Cancer Institute (NCI)
staff scientist and first author of the study. "ß-defensin 2 is likely
to play an important role in the immune system's ability to recognize
protein fragments from the body's own cells, including tumor cells."
Working in both mice and laboratory cell cultures, Biragyn and his
colleagues found that ß-defensin 2 directly activates immune cells known
as dendritic cells. Once activated, dendritic cells interact with other
components of the immune system to stimulate the multiplication of a
subset of T cells that will recognize and destroy infected cells.
Dendritic cells can also trigger attack of tumor cells by the immune
system.
"When we administered ß-defensin 2 to mice, we observed a robust
response among cells involved in anti-tumor immunity," noted NCI's Larry
W. Kwak, M.D., Ph.D., the senior investigator on the study. Researchers
hope to take advantage of this property by incorporating ß-defensin 2
into cancer vaccines.
Cancer vaccines are an investigational therapy designed to program
the body's own immune system to attack a tumor. The vaccine does this by
training T cells to recognize cancerous cells. Scientists hope that
adding ß-defensin 2 to such vaccines will promote the growth and
multiplication of the tumor-destroying cells, improving patient response
to the therapy.
Similarly, researchers hope that ß-defensin 2 will also be useful in
improving AIDS vaccines in the future.
For more information on cancer, please visit NCI's Web site at
http://www.cancer.gov
Editor's Note: The original news release can be found
here.
Note: This story has been adapted from a
news release issued for journalists and other members of the public. If
you wish to quote any part of this story, please credit NIH/National
Cancer Institute as the original source. You may also wish to
include the following link in any citation:
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2002/11/021101070242.htm
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