Cognitive deficits after aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) are
common and disabling. Patients who experience delayed deterioration associated
with vasospasm are likely to have cognitive deficits, particularly problems with
executive function, verbal and spatial memory. Here, we report
neurophysiological and pathological mechanisms underlying behavioral deficits in
a murine model of SAH. On tests of spatial memory, animals with SAH performed
worse than sham animals in the first week and one month after SAH suggesting a
prolonged injury. Between three and six days after experimental hemorrhage, mice
demonstrated loss of late long-term potentiation (L-LTP) due to dysfunction of
the NMDA receptor. Suppression of innate immune cell activation prevents delayed
vasospasm after murine SAH. We therefore explored the role of
neutrophil-mediated innate inflammation on memory deficits after SAH. Depletion
of neutrophils three days after SAH mitigates tissue inflammation, reverses
cerebral vasoconstriction in the middle cerebral artery, and rescues L-LTP
dysfunction at day 6. Spatial memory deficits in both the short and long-term
are improved and associated with a shift of NMDA receptor subunit composition
toward a memory sparing phenotype. This work supports further investigating
suppression of innate immunity after SAH as a target for preventative therapies
in SAH.
Epithelial ovarian carcinoma (EOC) is the most prevalent form of ovarian cancer in the United States, representing approximately 85% of all cases and causing more deaths than any other gynecologic malignancy. We propose that optimized control of EOC requires the incorporation of a vaccine capable of inducing safe and effective preemptive immunity in cancer-free women. In addition, we hypothesize that ovarian-specific self-proteins that are "retired" from autoimmune-inducing expression levels as ovaries age but are expressed at high levels in emerging EOC may serve as vaccine targets for mediating safe and effective primary immunoprevention. Here, we show that expression of the extracellular domain of anti-Müllerian hormone receptor II (AMHR2-ED) in normal tissues is confined exclusively to the human ovary, drops to nonautoimmune inducing levels in postmenopausal ovaries, and is at high levels in approximately 90% of human EOC. We found that AMHR2-ED vaccination significantly inhibits growth of murine EOC and enhances overall survival without inducing oophoritis in aged female mice. The observed inhibition of EOC growth was mediated substantially by induction of AMHR2-ED-specific IgG antibodies that agonize receptor signaling of a Bax/caspase-3-dependent proapoptotic cascade. Our results indicate that AMHR2-ED vaccination may be particularly useful in providing safe and effective preemptive immunity against EOC in women at high genetic or familial risk who have the greatest need for a preventive vaccine and ultimately in cancer-free postmenopausal women who account for 75% of all EOC cases. .
Epithelial ovarian carcinoma (EOC) is the most prevalent and lethal form of ovarian cancer. The low five-year overall survival after EOC diagnosis indicates an urgent need for more effective ways to control this disease. Anti-Müllerian hormone receptor 2 (AMHR2) is an ovarian protein overexpressed in the majority of human EOCs. We have previously found that vaccination against the ovarian-specific extracellular domain of AMHR2 (AMHR2-ED) significantly inhibits growth of murine EOCs through an IgG-mediated mechanism that agonizes receptor signaling of a Bax/caspase-3 dependent proapoptotic cascade. To determine if a single monoclonal antibody (mAb) could inhibit growth of human EOC, we generated a panel of mAbs specific for recombinant human AMHR2-ED and characterized a candidate mAb for humanization and use in clinical trials. We found that our candidate 4D12G1 mAb is an IgG 1 that shows high affinity antigen-specific binding to the 7-mer 20 KTLGELL 26 sequence of AMHR2-ED that facilitates induction of programmed cell death in EOC cells. Most importantly, the 4D12G1 mAb significantly inhibits growth of primary human EOCs in patient-derived xenografts (PDXs) by inducing direct apoptosis of EOC tumors. Our results support the view that a humanized 4D12G1 mAb may be a much needed and effective reagent for passive immunotherapy of human EOC.
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