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Recombinant fusion proteins for targeted therapy of leukemia | 29503
Journal of Proteomics & Bioinformatics

Journal of Proteomics & Bioinformatics
Open Access

ISSN: 0974-276X

+44 1223 790975

Recombinant fusion proteins for targeted therapy of leukemia


International Conference on Protein Engineering

October 26-28, 2015 Chicago, USA

Madhumathi J, Sridevi Surapally and Rama S Verma

Indian Institute of Technology Madras, India

Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Proteomics Bioinform

Abstract :

Recombinant immunotoxins are antibody-toxin chimeric molecules that kill cancer cells via binding to a surface antigen, internalization and delivery of the toxin moiety to the cell cytosol. Immunotoxins target the surface of cancer cells with considerable potency using protein toxins capable of killing a cell with a single molecule. It is well established that cancer cells overexpressed several tumor associated antigens, membrane receptors and carbohydrate antigens. Ligands for these receptors or monoclonal antibodies or single chain variable fragments (scFv) targeted against these antigens are fused with bacterial or plant toxins and used as immunotoxins. The recent emergence of a new class of immunotoxins in which the cytotoxic moiety is an endogenous protein of human origin like proapoptotic protein has reduced immunogenicity and toxicity. We have developed humanized chimeric toxins using human TRAIL and IL2, which specifically targets leukemic cells leaving normal cells. The two most important cytokines used as targeting molecules with anti-tumor activity approved by FDA for cancer treatment are IL2 and type I IFN. IL2 promotes natural killer cells, T-cells and acts as a mitogen and interferes with blood flow to tumor. Low dose recombinant IL2 is proved to activate antitumor immune response in advanced malignancies. Soluble recombinant TRAIL (rTRAIL) induces apoptotic cell death in a wide variety of tumor cell lines in vitro, while sparing most normal cells. Importantly, no apparent systemic toxicity of rTRAIL was also observed in non-human primates. Humanized immunotoxins using IL-2 as the target ligand and TRAIL as the toxin moiety would highly improve the therapeutic efficacy in cancer.

Biography :

Madhumathi J has completed her PhD at Anna University, Chennai which was on the development of multi-epitope peptide vaccines for Lymphatic Filariasis. She has 17 publications, two patents for filarial vaccines, two Genbank submissions and a protein structure submission in PDB. She received New Investigator Award from the International Society of Infectious Diseases, USA on April 2014 for vaccine study. Currently, her Post-doctoral work in Indian Institute of Technology, Chennai involves identifying cancer stem cells in leukemia and targeting them. She received Young Scientist Grant to carry out this project from the Department of Science and Technology, India.

Email: madhurachel@gmail.com

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