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Title: Effectiveness of HB2 (anti-CD7)--saporin immunotoxin in an in vivo model of human T-cell leukaemia developed in severe combined immunodeficient mice. Author: Morland BJ, Barley J, Boehm D, Flavell SU, Ghaleb N, Kohler JA, Okayama K, Wilkins B, Flavell DJ. Journal: Br J Cancer; 1994 Feb; 69(2):279-85. PubMed ID: 7507691. Abstract: The transplantation of the human T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukaemia (T-ALL) cell line HSB-2 into severe combined immunodeficient (SCID) mice was found to produce a disseminated pattern of leukaemia similar to that seen in man. The intravenous injection of 10(7) HSB-2 cells was associated with a universally fatal leukaemia. Histopathological examination of animals revealed the spread of leukaemia initially from bone marrow to involve all major organs including the meninges. An immunotoxin (HB2-Sap) was constructed by conjugating the anti-CD7 MAb HB2 to the ribosome-inactivating protein saporin. An in vitro protein synthesis inhibition assay revealed specific delivery of HB2-Sap immunotoxin (IT) to CD7+ HSB-2 target cells with an IC50 of 4.5 pM. When SCID mice were injected with 10(6) HSB-2 cells and then treated 8 days later with a single intravenous dose of 10 micrograms of immunotoxin there was a significant therapeutic effect evidenced by the numbers of animals surviving in the therapy group compared with untreated controls (chi 2 = 5.348, P = 0.021). These results demonstrate the useful application of human leukaemia xenografts in SCID mice and the potential therapeutic effect of an anti-CD7 immunotoxin in human T-ALL.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]