Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0699790 (colon cancer)
28,837 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two immunotoxins were constructed by chemically coupling the monoclonal antibody C242 to Pseudomonas exotoxin A (PE) or a modified form, NlysPE40, that lacks the cell binding domain of PE. Monoclonal antibody C242 recognizes a specific sialylated carbohydrate epitope on a high molecular weight membrane glycoprotein present on cells of human colon, pancreatic, and cervical cancers. C242-PE and C242-NlysPE40 were very cytotoxic for cells expressing this antigen with 50% inhibition of protein synthesis occurring on Colo205 cells at 0.2 ng/ml (0.9 pM) for C242-PE and 6.0 ng/ml (31 pM) for C242-NlysPE40. The two immunotoxins also exhibited a strong antitumor effect on a human colon cancer xenograft grown in nude mice. The specificity and potency of these two C242 immunotoxins warrant their further development for the treatment of cancer.
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PMID:Monoclonal antibody C242-Pseudomonas exotoxin A. A specific and potent immunotoxin with antitumor activity on a human colon cancer xenograft in nude mice. 164 13

Blood transfusions have been shown to be associated with increased bacterial infection rates in colon cancer patients and in multiple animal studies. This increased susceptibility appears due to impairments in the systemic resistance to infections and not to alterations in the local response. Specifically, transfusions in a rat model were not found to alter the peritoneal cavity's response to an Escherichia coli challenge or the burn wound's response to a Pseudomonas aeruginosa challenge. Transfusions did impair the macrophage's ability to phagocytose and kill bacteria. Transfusions also increased the serum level of the immunosuppressive glucocorticoid, corticosterone.
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PMID:The effect of blood transfusions on immune function. V. The effect on the inflammatory response to bacterial infections. 240 4

The efficacy of intracavitary chemoimmunotoxin therapy for cancer treatment was evaluated using the human colon carcinoma (HT-29) which had been xenografted i.p. into nude mice. Mice bearing HT-29 were treated with an immunotoxin consisting of the monoclonal antibody OVB3 coupled to Pseudomonas exotoxin (OVB3-PE), with cyclophosphamide (Cy), or with both OVB3-PE plus Cy. Mice given injections i.p. of 3 x 10(6) HT-29 ascites cells developed a localized disease that presented as both malignant ascites and solid tumor confined to the peritoneal cavity. All mice died within 30 to 40 days. Mice that received either three or six injections of OVB3-PE at a dose of 0.5 micrograms every other day beginning 3 days post-tumor inoculation exhibited significantly increased median survival times (MSTs) (P = 0.002) of 62 and 68 days, respectively, as compared to a MST of 33 days for the controls. OVB3 alone or an irrelevant monoclonal antibody conjugated to PE exhibited no antitumor activity. The therapeutic effects of the immunotoxin could be blocked by giving a large amount of unconjugated OVB3 at the same time. Treatment of mice with Cy alone at the maximal tolerated dose (250 mg/kg) on Days 10 and 17 after tumor inoculation increased the MST from 33 days to 54 days. The maximum tolerated dose could be increased to 300 mg/kg per injection if the Cy treatment was preceded by 100 mg/kg of S-2-(3-aminopropylamino)ethyl phosphorothioic acid (WR-2721), a sulfhydryl compound that selectively protects normal tissue against the toxicity of radiation and alkylating agents. Cy plus WR-2721 treatment on Days 10 and 17 increased the MST from 35 to 61 days (P = 0.002). Interestingly, groups of mice that received either two, four, or seven treatments of OVB3-PE following Cy plus WR-2721 therapy exhibited a further increase (P less than 0.002) in MSTs to 81, 87, and 96 days, respectively. Thus, the combination of cytoreductive chemotherapy with the OVB3-PE was significantly more effective for the intracavitary treatment of established HT-29 colon cancer xenografts than either chemotherapy or immunotoxin therapy alone.
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PMID:Chemoimmunotoxin therapy against a human colon tumor (HT-29) xenografted into nude mice. 249 20

A cDNA encoding transforming growth factor type alpha (TGF alpha) was fused to the 5' end of a gene encoding a modified form of Pseudomonas exotoxin A (PE), which is devoid of the cell recognition domain (domain Ia). The chimeric molecule, termed TGF alpha-PE40, was expressed in Escherichia coli and isolated from the periplasm or inclusion bodies depending on the construction expressed. TGF alpha-PE40 was found to be extremely cytotoxic to cells displaying epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptors. Comparison with a similar molecule in which TGF alpha was placed at the carboxyl end of PE40 demonstrated the importance of the position of the cell recognition element; TGF alpha-PE40 was found to be about 30-fold more cytotoxic to cells bearing EGF receptors than PE40-TGF alpha. In addition, TGF alpha-PE40 was shown to be extremely cytotoxic to a variety of cancer cell lines including liver, ovarian, and colon cancer cell lines, indicating high levels of EGF receptor expression in these cells.
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PMID:Cytotoxic activities of a fusion protein comprised of TGF alpha and Pseudomonas exotoxin. 255 14

Cefsulodin (CFS), a new antipseudomonal cephalosporin, shows a potent antibacterial activity against Pseudomonas aeruginosa and some Gram-positive bacteria, whereas it shows low activity against many Gram-negative rods. Against clinical isolates of P. aeruginosa, CFS was about 10 times more active than sulbenicillin and carbenicillin, and had a similar activity to gentamicin and dibekacin. The CFS was administered by an intravenous bolus injection at a dose of 1 g to each of 14 patients operated for acute peritonitis with drainage or radical mastectomy with drainage to treat breast cancer. These cases included 3 of localized peritonitis due to perforative appendicitis, 3 of diffuse peritonitis due to perforative duodenal ulcer, 2 of panperitonitis due to intestinal obstruction and perforative sigmoid colon cancer, 4 of subacute cholangitis, localized peritonitis T-tube choledochal drainage due to choledocholithiasis, and 2 of breast cancer. Materials from drain exudate were taken at intervals with sterilized paper discs and CFS concentrations were determined by the paper disc bioassay method with P. aeruginosa NCTC 10490 as the test organism. Serum concentrations of CFS just after injection reached 135.4 +/- 66.1 micrograms/ml, and they were 2.7 +/- 1.5 micrograms/ml at 6 hours after injection. Concentrations in purulent exudates of patients with acute peritonitis increased quickly after intravenous bolus injections, and reached maximum levels relatively early after injection in cases 2 to 3 days after operation. In cases 10 to 13 days after operation, CFS levels were comparatively low and reached to peak levels at 4 to 5 hours after injection. Levels of CFS in purulent exudate tended to increase in proportion to the severity of symptoms, as did CFS levels in appendix wall. Pseudomonas spp. were not isolated in this study, but MICs of CFS were mostly around 1.56 to 3.13 micrograms/ml when clinically isolated Pseudomonas spp. were present at 10(6) cells/ml. Levels of CFS in infected exudate were higher than the above MIC values against Pseudomonas spp. Therefore, CFS were a useful drug for the chemotherapy against pseudomonal infections.
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PMID:[Cefsulodin concentration in exudates from drainage of patients with acute peritonitis following intravenous administration]. 309 29

Immunotoxin LMB-1 is composed of monoclonal antibody B3 chemically linked to PE38, a genetically engineered form of Pseudomonas exotoxin. B3 recognizes a carbohydrate antigen (Le(Y)) present on many human solid tumors. LMB-1 has excellent antitumor activity in nude mice bearing Le(Y)-positive tumors. We conducted a phase I study of 38 patients with solid tumors who failed conventional therapy and whose tumors expressed the Le(Y) antigen. Objective antitumor activity was observed in 5 patients, 18 had stable disease, 15 progressed. A complete remission was observed in a patient with metastatic breast cancer to supraclavicular nodes. A greater than 75% tumor reduction and resolution of all clinical symptoms lasting for more than six months was observed in a colon cancer patient with extensive retroperitoneal and cervical metastasis. Three patients (two colon, one breast cancer) had minor responses. The maximum tolerated dose of LMB-1 is 75 microgram/kg given intravenously three times every other day. The major toxicity is vascular leak syndrome manifested by hypoalbuminemia, fluid retention, hypotension and, in one case, pulmonary edema. Although immunotoxins have been evaluated in clinical studies for more than two decades, this is the first report of antitumor activity in epithelial tumors.
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PMID:Treatment of advanced solid tumors with immunotoxin LMB-1: an antibody linked to Pseudomonas exotoxin. 861 38

Luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone, also termed gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH), accounts for the hypothalamic-pituitary gonadal control of human reproduction. The involvement of GnRH has been demonstrated in several carcinomas of hormone-responsive tissues. Exploiting this common feature, we constructed a Pseudomonas exotoxin (PE)-based chimeric toxin (GnRH-PE66) aimed at targeting those cancer cells bearing GnRH binding sites. We report here the strong growth inhibition and killing of a surprisingly wide variety of cancers, confined to the adenocarcinoma type. These cancer cells arising from hormone-responsive tissues, as well as non-responsive ones, express specific GnRH binding sites as indicated by the marked killing of ovarian, breast, endometrial, cervical, colon, lung, hepatic, and renal adenocarcinoma. This cytotoxicity is specific as it could be blocked upon addition of excess GnRH. The specificity of GnRH-PE66 chimeric toxin was also confirmed by GnRH binding assays, and its ability to prevent the formation of colon cancer xenografts in nude mice is presented. Although the functional role of specific GnRH binding sites in human carcinomas remains obscure, GnRH-PE66 displays considerable targeting potential and its use as a therapeutic agent for cancer should be considered.
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PMID:Adenocarcinoma cells are targeted by the new GnRH-PE66 chimeric toxin through specific gonadotropin-releasing hormone binding sites. 911 Oct 76

The granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor (GM-CSFR) is a potential target for toxin-directed therapy, because it is overexpressed on many leukemias and solid tumors and apparently not on stem cells. To investigate the potential therapeutic use of GM-CSF toxins, we fused human GM-CSF to truncated forms of either Pseudomonas exotoxin (PE) or diphtheria toxin (DT) and tested the cytotoxicity of the resulting GM-CSF-PE38KDEL and DT388-GM-CSF on human gastrointestinal (GI) carcinomas and leukemias. Toward gastric and colon cancer cell lines, GM-CSF-PE38KDEL was much more cytotoxic than DT388-GM-CSF, with IC50s (concentration resulting in 50% inhibition of protein synthesis) of 0.5 to 10 ng/mL compared with 4 to 400 ng/mL, respectively. In contrast, toward leukemia lines and fresh bone marrow cells DT388-GM-CSF was more cytotoxic than GM-CSF-PE38KDEL. The cytotoxicity of both GM-CSF-PE38KDEL and DT388-GM-CSF toward the human cells was specific, because it could be competed by an excess of GM-CSF. Binding studies indicated that human GM-CSF receptors were present on all of the human GI and leukemic cell lines tested, at levels of 540 to 3,700 sites per cell (kd = 0.2 to 2 nmol/L), and the number of sites per cell did not correlate with the cell type. A similar pattern of cytotoxicity was found with recombinant immunotoxins binding to the transferrin receptor, in that anti-TFR(Fv)-PE38KDEL was much more cytotoxic than DT388-anti-TFR(Fv) toward GI cells, but both were similar in their cytotoxic activity toward leukemia cells. The fact that PE is more effective than DT in killing GI but not leukemic tumor cells targeted by GM-CSF indicates a fundamental difference in the way PE or DT gains access to the cytosol in these cells. GM-CSF-PE38KDEL and DT388-GM-CSF deserve further evaluation as possible treatments for selected tumors.
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PMID:Recombinant toxins containing human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor and either pseudomonas exotoxin or diphtheria toxin kill gastrointestinal cancer and leukemia cells. 920 60

We have engineered an anti-carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) single-chain immunotoxin derived from humanized anti-CEA antibody (hMN14) and a truncated Pseudomonas exotoxin (PE), PE40. The purified anti-CEA immunotoxin (hMN14(Fv)-PE40) was first measured for binding affinity against a CEA-positive colorectal carcinoma cell line and compared with its parental IgG and the monovalent Fab fragment. The Ka of sFv-PE40, Fab, and IgG were 5 x 10(7), 6 x 10(7), and 3 x 10(8) M(-1), respectively. There was no significant affinity loss by conversion of Fab to the single-chain Fv, but these monovalent forms were 5-6-fold reduced in affinity compared with the parental IgG. In cytotoxicity assays, the hMN14(Fv)-PE40 showed specific growth suppression of CEA-expressing colon cancer cell lines MIP-CEA (high CEA) and LS174T (moderate CEA) with IC50s of 12 ng/ml (0.2 nM) and 69 ng/ml (1.1 nM). These IC50s correlated inversely with the surface expression of CEA, such that 50% killing was equivalent for each cell type when expressed in toxin molecules bound/cell (3000-5000). The presence of soluble CEA up to 1000 ng/ml did not affect the cytotoxicity against CEA-expressing cells, with 50% suppression only at 4000 ng/ml that correlated with the binding Kd of the single-chain Fv. The stability of the hMN14(Fv)-PE40 molecule at 37 degrees C was confirmed by bioassay and by lack of aggregation. Our hMN14(Fv)-PE40 may be clinically useful for tumors with high CEA expression without affecting normal tissues with low or absent CEA, even in patients with high soluble antigen levels.
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PMID:A single-chain immunotoxin against carcinoembryonic antigen that suppresses growth of colorectal carcinoma cells. 982 49

We determined the efficacy of HB21(Fv)PE40, a single-chain immunotoxin made by fusing the variable regions of a monoclonal antibody directed at the human transferrin receptor (TfR) with a truncated mutant of Pseudomonas exotoxin (PE), against metastatic human colon carcinoma KM12L4 cells growing in the liver or subcutis of nude mice. Organ-specific modulation of TfR expression was examined by immunohistochemistry and flow cytometry using anti-human CD71 antibody. KM12L4 cells expressed human TfR and were lysed in vitro by HB21(Fv)PE40 but not LMB-7 (a control immunotoxin specific for a Lewis Y-related carbohydrate antigen). KM12L4 cells growing in the liver expressed higher levels of TfR than cells growing s.c. Systemic administration of HB21(Fv)PE40 eliminated KM12L4 liver metastasis, whereas administration of LMB-7 did not. Treatment of mice with HB21(Fv)PE40 only delayed the growth of s.c. tumors. KM12L4 cells recovered from liver metastases, expressed higher levels of TfR, and were more sensitive to lysis by HB21(Fv)PE40 than KM12L4 cells recovered from s.c. tumors. Indeed, collectively, the data show that the expression level of the TfR by human colon cancer cells is modulated by the organ microenvironment which can be advantageous for the use of therapeutic immunotoxins.
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PMID:Site-specific expression of transferrin receptor by human colon cancer cells directly correlates with eradication by antitransferrin recombinant immunotoxin. 1099 73


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