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Showing papers by "Nissi Varki published in 1998"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that P-selectin, which normally binds leukocyte ligands, can promote tumor growth and facilitate the metastatic seeding of a mucin-producing carcinoma.
Abstract: Selectins are adhesion receptors that normally recognize certain vascular mucin-type glycoproteins bearing the carbohydrate structure sialyl-Lewisx. The clinical prognosis and metastatic progression of many epithelial carcinomas has been correlated independently with production of tumor mucins and with enhanced expression of sialyl-Lewisx. Metastasis is thought to involve the formation of tumor-platelet-leukocyte emboli and their interactions with the endothelium of distant organs. We provide a link between these observations by showing that P-selectin, which normally binds leukocyte ligands, can promote tumor growth and facilitate the metastatic seeding of a mucin-producing carcinoma. P-selectin-deficient mice showed significantly slower growth of subcutaneously implanted human colon carcinoma cells and generated fewer lung metastases from intravenously injected cells. Three potential pathophysiological mechanisms are demonstrated: first, intravenously injected tumor cells home to the lungs of P-selectin deficient mice at a lower rate; second, P-selectin-deficient mouse platelets fail to adhere to tumor cell-surface mucins; and third, tumor cells lodged in lung vasculature after intravenous injection often are decorated with platelet clumps, and these are markedly diminished in P-selectin-deficient animals.

419 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
01 Mar 1998-Blood
TL;DR: Data show that targeted delivery of cytokines to the tumor microenvironment offers a new strategy to elicit an effective cellular immune response mediated by NK cells against metastatic neuroblastoma.

197 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated for the first time that subcutaneous vaccination with these transduced cells induces a protective immunity, as indicated by the complete absence of liver and bone marrow metastasis after challenge with NXS2 wild-type tumor cells.
Abstract: A major goal of tumor immunotherapy is the effective eradication of established metastases associated with the induction of a T cell-mediated protective immunity. We achieved this in a poorly immunogenic murine neuroblastoma model by gene therapy with a single chain interleukin 12 (scIL-12) fusion protein that assures equal expression of its p35 and p40 subunits. Thus, NXS2 hybrid neuroblastoma cells (C1300 × dorsal root ganglion cells), which form experimental bone marrow and liver metastases in syngeneic A/J mice, were transduced with a gene encoding murine interleukin 12, monomerized by introduction of a protein linker between the p35 and p40 protein chains of this heterodimeric cytokine. We demonstrate for the first time that subcutaneous vaccination with these transduced cells induces a protective immunity, as indicated by the complete absence of liver and bone marrow metastasis after challenge with NXS2 wild-type tumor cells. Furthermore, vaccination of animals with established liver and bone marrow metastases completely eradicated liver metastases and suppressed bone marrow metastases. The local and systemic immune response against scIL-12-transduced NXS2 cells is largely dependent on CD8+ T cells. This was demonstrated in vivo by depletion of immunocompetent A/J mice with monoclonal anti-CD4 and anti-CD8 antibodies and in vitro by specific major histocompatibility complex, class I-restricted CD8+ T cell-mediated killing of NXS2 and their parental C1300 neuroblastoma cells. In conclusion, we demonstrate successful anti-tumor immunotherapy with an scIL-12 fusion protein that could facilitate clinical application of interleukin 12 gene therapy.

95 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The increased expression in malignant breast cells is of particular interest with respect to the use of the hASNA-I-specific 5G8 monoclonal antibody for screening of cytological specimens.
Abstract: Human ATPase (hASNA-I) is a novel human gene recently cloned on the basis of homology to the arsA gene of bacteria. Its protein product is an ATPase that is free in the cytoplasm and bound in the perinuclear area and nucleolus in human cells. We prepared the hASNA-I-specific 5G8 monoclonal antibody and used it to investigate the expression of hASNA-I in normal human tissues and breast cancers. hASNA-I was detected immunohistochemically only in the epithelial cells of the liver, kidney, and stomach wall, in the adrenal medulla, in the islet cells of the pancreas, in the red pulp of the spleen, and in cardiac and skeletal muscle. No staining was observed in the uterus, testis, lung, thyroid, cerebellum, and large intestine. Although no staining was also observed in normal breast tissue, all four cases of breast fibroadenomas and all 15 cases of either primary or metastatic breast carcinoma demonstrated increased staining. No embryological or functional common denominator is readily apparent. However, the increased expression in malignant breast cells is of particular interest with respect to the use of this antibody for screening of cytological specimens.

13 citations