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Comparative Study
. 1995 Jan;2(1):59-65.

A carcinoembryonic antigen polynucleotide vaccine has in vivo antitumor activity

Affiliations
  • PMID: 7712333
Comparative Study

A carcinoembryonic antigen polynucleotide vaccine has in vivo antitumor activity

R M Conry et al. Gene Ther. 1995 Jan.

Abstract

We have constructed a plasmid DNA encoding the full-length cDNA for human carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) driven by the cytomegalovirus early promoter/enhancer and demonstrated that this plasmid can function as a polynucleotide vaccine. The immune response elicited by the CEA polynucleotide vaccine is dose and schedule dependent. There appears to be a threshold dose of 50 micrograms capable of inducing CEA-specific lymphoblastic transformation, lymphokine release, and antibody response. Doses of 10 micrograms were significantly less effective. When 50-micrograms doses are employed, thrice weekly or weekly vaccination schedules more reliably elicit CEA-specific immune responses by day 43 than does an every-3-weeks schedule. Furthermore the CEA polynucleotide vaccine can immunoprotect against challenge with syngeneic CEA-transduced colon carcinoma cells as early as 3 weeks after the first vaccination. Studies are ongoing to demonstrate the ability of CEA polynucleotide vaccination to treat pre-existing syngeneic mouse colon and breast carcinomas expressing human CEA.

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