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Intratumoral injection of an adenovirus expressing...
Journal article

Intratumoral injection of an adenovirus expressing interleukin 2 induces regression and immunity in a murine breast cancer model.

Abstract

Rodent tumor cells engineered to secrete cytokines such as interleukin 2 (IL-2) or IL-4 are rejected by syngeneic recipients due to an enhanced antitumor host immune response. An adenovirus vector (AdCAIL-2) containing the human IL-2 gene has been constructed and shown to direct secretion of high levels of human IL-2 in infected tumor cells. AdCAIL-2 induces regression of tumors in a transgenic mouse model of mammary adenocarcinoma following intratumoral injection. Elimination of existing tumors in this way results in immunity against a second challenge with tumor cells. These findings suggest that adenovirus vectors expressing cytokines may form the basis for highly effective immunotherapies of human cancers.

Authors

Addison CL; Braciak T; Ralston R; Muller WJ; Gauldie J; Graham FL

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Vol. 92, No. 18, pp. 8522–8526

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Publication Date

August 29, 1995

DOI

10.1073/pnas.92.18.8522

ISSN

0027-8424

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