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Unorthodox strategy: new cancer vaccine may thwart melanoma.


Efforts to enlist the immune system immune system

Cells, cell products, organs, and structures of the body involved in the detection and destruction of foreign invaders, such as bacteria, viruses, and cancer cells. Immunity is based on the system's ability to launch a defense against such invaders.
 in the fight against cancer have generally yielded disappointing results. Scientists have yet to create a so-called cancer vaccine The term cancer vaccine is often used to describe a process whereby a person's immune system is coaxed into recognizing and destroying malignant cells without harming normal cells.  that reliably primes the immune system to recognize malignant cells and target them for destruction.

Having taken an unusual approach in their experiments on mice, researchers now report that destroying perfectly good skin cells can incite To arouse; urge; provoke; encourage; spur on; goad; stir up; instigate; set in motion; as in to incite a riot. Also, generally, in Criminal Law to instigate, persuade, or move another to commit a crime; in this sense nearly synonymous with abet.  the immune system to kill the cancerous versions of these cells--with only modest side effects Side effects

Effects of a proposed project on other parts of the firm.
.

The potential treatment targets melanocytes Melanocytes
Skin cells derived from the neural crest that produce the protein pigment melanin.

Mentioned in: Malignant Melanoma, Skin Pigmentation Disorders

melanocytes
, the cells that give skin its pigmentation pigmentation, name for the coloring matter found in certain plant and animal cells and for the color produced thereby. Pigmentation occurs in nearly all living organisms. . When malignant, these cells become melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer.

Although the experimental therapy would be a treatment for existing disease, the researchers refer to it as a cancer vaccine since it enlists the immune system to kill malignant cells, says study coauthor Gregory A. Daniels, a medical oncologist medical oncologist  Oncology An oncologist who diagnoses and treats cancer with chemotherapy, hormones, biologicals, or immunologic agents; the MO becomes a cancer Pt's de facto primary care giver, and coordinates treatment provided by other specialists.  at the Mayo Clinic Mayo Clinic: see Mayo, Charles Horace.

Mayo Clinic

voluntary association of more than 500 physicians in Rochester, Minnesota. [Am. Hist.: EB, 11: 723]

See : Medicine
 in Rochester, Minn.

This vaccine, administered to the mice in a series of injections, contains DNA DNA: see nucleic acid.
DNA
 or deoxyribonucleic acid

One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes.
 plus an antiviral drug. In response to the treatment, the mice lost not only melanoma cells but also many healthy melanocytes, leaving the black mice with white splotches of hair that lasted for months. The findings appear in the September Nature Biotechnology.

For the experiment, Daniels and his colleagues implanted melanoma tumors in the mice. Starting 3 days later and continuing over the next 2 weeks the scientists injected the animals with two types of DNA and an antiviral drug called ganciclovir. One of the DNAs encodes a protein known to boost immune reactions; the other DNA encodes a viral enzyme.

"It's fortuitous that melanocytes seem to take up the DNA," Daniels says.

The mouse melanocytes then start making the viral enzyme and the immune-boosting protein, says Daniels. Ganciclovir latches onto the enzyme and kills the melanocytes.

The dying melanocytes "spill their contents," says Daniels, which include the immune-boosting protein and various other stress factors. These compounds set off a response by immune cells, which then zero in on and destroy other melanocytes and melanoma cells.

The mice remained free of tumors for at least 100 days after receiving the vaccine. Notably, the treatment destroyed tumors in areas away from the injection site. However, when the team implanted new tumors in the mice 100 days after the first batch of tumors had been eradicated, the protection had waned and the mice succumbed to melanoma.

The researchers traced the immune onslaught to shock troops known as CD8 T cells. The cancer vaccine didn't work in mice lacking such cells.

Other immune cells eventually suppress CD8 T cells, so the treatment isn't expected to continue to attack healthy melanocytes and, in that way, cause autoimmune disease autoimmune disease, any of a number of abnormal conditions caused when the body produces antibodies to its own substances. In rheumatoid arthritis, a group of antibody molecules called collectively RF, or rheumatoid factor, is complexed to the individual's own gamma .

These experiments are "very exciting," says cell biologist Mark E. Dudley of the National Cancer Institute in Bethesda, Md. "They indicate that the immune system is capable of seeing tumors and eliminating them under the appropriate conditions."

"The success rate of [previously tested] vaccines is less than 5 percent of treated patients," Dudley says. "New treatments are desperately needed." The incidence of melanoma is growing faster than any other cancer, with some estimates suggesting that 1 in 100 people in the United States can expect to develop melanoma at some time.

STATS

53,600

Estimated number of people in the United States diagnosed with melanoma per year
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Seppa, N.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Aug 21, 2004
Words:550
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