An Enhanced Anti-Tumor Response by Using Bacterial Magnetosomes Gene Administration Platform

Authors

  • Yishu Tang
  • Chunxia Zhou
  • Wenbo Ma
  • Dongmei Wang
  • Shuren Zhang

Abstract

DNA vaccination is an effective way to induce specific immunity. In our study, we used magnetosomes (bacterial magnetic particles, BMPs) as the vehicle of a DNA complex of a secondary lymphoid tissue chemokine, human papillomavirus type E7 (HPV-E7) and Ig-Fc fragment (pSLC-E7-Fc) to produce a gene vaccine (BMP-V) for tumor immunotherapy. In a mouse tumour model, intramuscular injection of BMP-V plus magnetic exposure induced E7- specific immunity eliciting to tumor inhibition. Taken together, these results demonstrated that BMP could be applied as a DNA vehicle to induce specific immune effect.

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Published

2018-05-18

How to Cite

Tang, Y., Zhou, C., Ma, W., Wang, D., & Zhang, S. (2018). An Enhanced Anti-Tumor Response by Using Bacterial Magnetosomes Gene Administration Platform. Archives of Clinical and Biomedical Research, 2(4), 145–150. Retrieved from https://fortunejournals.org/ojs/index.php/acbr/article/view/14721