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Clinical Applications of Immunotoxins

Authors :
Arthur E. Frankel
Arthur E. Frankel
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

1 2 D. FITZGERALDI, I. PASTAN, and J. ROBERTUS Introduction............. I 2 Toxin Structure-Function Properties 2 2. 1 Functions........................ 2 2. 2 Binding......................... 3 3 Intracellular Processing - Cleavage and Reduction...... 4 3. 1 Cytosolic Activity................ 5 4 Immunotoxin Design and Testing. 6 5 Conclusion.. 8 References..... 8 1 Introduction While various treatment approaches for cancer include reversal of the transformed phenotype, stimulation of immune responses, inhibition of metastatic spread and deprivation of key nutrients, the goal of immunotoxin treatment is the direct killing of malignant cells. Because they are enzymatic proteins that act catalytically to kill cells, bacterial and plant toxins are often employed as the cell-killing component of immunotoxins. Here we provide background information into the structure-func­ tion relationships of toxins and discuss how they can be combined with cell-binding antibodies or other ligands to generate immunotoxins. Bacterial and plant toxins (e. g., diphtheria toxin, Pseudomonas exotoxin and ricin) are among the most toxic substances known. However, because they bind to cell surface receptors that are present on most normal cells, unmodified toxins are generally useless as anti-cancer agents. To convert toxins into more selective agents, their binding domains are either eliminated or disabled and replaceq with cell­ binding antibodies that are tumor-selective.

Details

Language :
English
ISBNs :
9783540640974 and 9783642721533
Volume :
00234
Database :
eBook Index
Journal :
Clinical Applications of Immunotoxins
Publication Type :
eBook
Accession number :
2881308