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New cancer vaccine starves tumours of blood

Scientists at the Karolinska Institutet have developed a DNA vaccine that restricts the supply of blood to tumours and slows the growth of breast cancer tumours in mice.

If a cancer tumour is to become larger than a few millimetres, it must be able to stimulate the formation of new blood vessels to secure a supply of oxygen and nutrients. Drugs that prevent the growth of blood vessels are, thus, a potential treatment alternative for tumours.

A protein known as ‘Delta-like ligand 4’ (DLL4) has been identified recently as an important component in regulating the formation of new blood vessels. When a new blood vessel starts to grow from an existing vessel, DLL4 is expressed in the tip cells at the end of the new vessel sprout and prevents neighbouring cells from forming new vessels.

If the expression of DLL4 is blocked in a tumour, there is a large increase in the formation of new, but non-functional, blood vessels, and this leads to the tumour growing more slowly. Now, a research group has developed a DNA vaccine against DLL4 and the blood vessel tip cells.

They have shown that vaccination against DLL4 causes an immunological antibody response to DLL4, and this hinders the growth of breast cancer in mice. Tumours from vaccinated mice had a tightly packed network of non-functional blood vessels and poor blood supply. The vaccination did not cause any undesired effects and did not affect the animal’s capacity for wound healing.

‘We have worked with breast cancer tumours since they often express high levels of DLL4, while normal breast tissue does not. We hope that it will be possible to use this vaccine to prevent recurrence of breast cancer after surgical treatment’, says Kristian Pietras, who led the study.

Further reading

Haller, B.K. et al. Therapeutic efficacy of a DNA vaccine targeting the endothelial tip cell antigen delta-like 4 in mammary carcinoma.’ Oncogene (May 2010)

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