Tag Archives: Interleukin

Smart bomb treatment for cancer

A ‘smart bomb’ which simultaneously attacks cancers and boosts the immune system has been successfully tested by researchers.

The tiny hollow spheres become trapped in leaky tumour blood vessels, where they release an anti-cancer drug.

At the same time the spheres, whose scientific name is nanolipogels (NLGs), release a protein that rallies the body’s own defences.

Scientists tested the spheres in mice on melanoma skin cancer that had spread to the lungs.

They found tumour growth was significantly delayed and the survival of the mice increased.

The new technology overcomes a problem with cancer treatment that has been difficult to tackle using conventional therapies, say the scientists.

Cancer tumours are known to secrete chemicals that confuse the immune system.

Cancer cells

Cancer cells

But attempts to boost patient immunity while at the same time neutralising the cancer’s chemical arsenal rarely work.

The NLGs, described in the journal Nature Materials, package together two completely different kinds of molecule.

One is designed to overcome a potent cancer defence weapon known as TGF-beta, which stunts the local immune system.

The other, an interleukin signalling molecule, boosts immune system activity.


Researcher Dr Stephen Wrzesinski, from Yale University School of Medicine in the US, said: ‘We chose melanoma because it is the ‘poster child’ solid tumour for immunotherapy.

‘One problem with current metastatic (spreading) melanoma immunotherapies is the difficulty of managing autoimmune toxicities when the treatment agents are administered throughout the body.

‘The novel nanolipogel delivery system we used will hopefully bypass systemic toxicities while providing support to enable the body to fight off the tumour at the tumour bed itself.’

Each NLG is small enough to travel through the bloodstream, but large enough to get entrapped in leaky cancer blood vessels. Once trapped, they biodegrade to release their cargo.

Autoimmune Disease cellular pathway found

Researchers have discovered a cellular pathway that promotes inflammation in diseases like asthma, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, inflammatory bowel disease, and multiple sclerosis. Understanding the details of this pathway may provide opportunities for tailored treatments of inflammatory and autoimmune diseases.

Discovery of this pathway was the work of an active collaboration between Xiaoxia Li, Ph.D., and Thomas Hamilton, Ph.D., Department Chair, both of the Department of Immunology at Lerner Research Institute of Cleveland Clinic.

Their publications in Nature Immunology, selected for a News and Views article in the same issue, portray how a protein molecule known as interleukin-17 (IL-17) spurs inflammation by recruiting specific white blood cells to sites of infection and injury, producing a strong, pathogenic response.

multiple sclerosis

Multiple sclerosis

Being able to block this pathway may treat IL-17-induced inflammatory diseases. Molecular factors discovered by Li and Hamilton make this concept a potential strategy.


“We are excited by the possibilities that this new research opens up for developing improved therapeutics for these difficult diseases,” Hamilton said.

“Being able to collaborate like this really expedites the science,” Li added, “ultimately leading, we hope, to profound improvement for those suffering from these autoimmune and inflammatory conditions.”