Abstract

In previous studies, it has been shown that the granulocyte macrophage‐colony stimulating factor (GM‐CSF) or interleukin‐2 (IL‐2) surface modified MB49 bladder cancer stem cells (MCSCs) vaccine could induce a specific antitumor immunity and against bladder cancer in mice model respectively. However, whether combined administration of GM‐CSF and IL‐2 could produce specific immune responses to cancer stem cells (CSCs) was uncertain. MCSCs were established and characterized. GM‐CSF and IL‐2 MCSCs vaccines were prepared and bioactivity was evaluated. The therapeutic, protective, specific, and memorial immune response animal experiments were designed. Tumor‐specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes assay, enzyme linked immunosorbent assay, flow cytometry assay were performed to indentify whether vaccine caused an antitumor immunity. Streptavidin (SA)‐GM‐CSF and SA‐IL‐2 MCSCs vaccines were prepared successfully. Such vaccines inhibited the volume of tumor and prolonged the survival of the mice in animal experiments. The express of IgG or IFN‐c, the portion of dendritic cells, CD8+ and CD4+ T cells were highest in the combined vaccines group than the SA‐GM‐CSF vaccine group, the SA‐IL‐2 vaccine group, the MCSCs group and the PBS group. The combined of GM‐CSF and IL‐2 vaccines could induce better antitumor immunity than a vaccine alone.

Highlights

  • Bladder cancer is a most usual urologic cancer in China and the world [1]

  • It has been shown that the granulocyte macrophage-­colony stimulating factor (GM-C­ SF) or interleukin-­2 (IL-­2) surface-­modified MB49 bladder cancer stem cells (MCSCs) vaccine could induce a specific antitumor immunity and against bladder cancer in mice model respectively [3, 4]

  • MCSCs were obtained from MB49 cells by limited dilution and serum-­free culture medium methods described in early study [8]

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Summary

Introduction

Bladder cancer is a most usual urologic cancer in China and the world [1]. Following surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy, immunotherapy has become the fourth cancer treatment. It has been shown that the granulocyte macrophage-­colony stimulating factor (GM-C­ SF) or interleukin-­2 (IL-­2) surface-­modified MB49 bladder cancer stem cells (MCSCs) vaccine could induce a specific antitumor immunity and against bladder cancer in mice model respectively [3, 4]. Our early studies have shown that GM-C­ SF or IL-­2 modified CSCs vaccines were able to inhibit metastatic bladder cancer respectively [3, 4]. Theoretically, combined administration of GM-­CSF and IL-­2 will have more potential producing immune response to eradicate CSCs. In this study, in the light of our protein anchor cytokine technology, combined administration of GM-­CSF and IL-­2 surface-m­ odified MCSCs vaccines were assessed for their role in CSCs metastatic mouse model

Materials and Methods
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