Virus Found In Black-Eyed Pea Plants Could Be Used To Treat Cancer

0
1K

Virus Found In Black-Eyed Pea Plants Could Be Used To Treat Cancer

What links black-eyed peas and cancer? The cowpea mosaic virus (CPMV), which researchers believe could pave the way for a low-cost but effective new treatment option for cancer patients.   

Immunotherapy is an exciting area of medicine that exploits the patient’s immune system to treat cancer. Several viruses are being investigated as contenders for immunotherapy treatments, one being CPMV, which previous preclinical studies have shown effectively target tumour cells in dogs and mice. When applied to a cancerous growth, CPMV “relieves the tumor microenvironment from immunosuppression and restarts the cancer immunity cycle,” researchers write in a study published in Cell Biomaterials

In most cases, the body’s immune system is able to detect and destroy cells that could be malignant. But occasionally, a malignant cell can slip under the radar and go unnoticed, and continue to develop into a cancerous tumor. Previously, researchers have shown that they can reverse immunosuppression by injecting CPMV into tumors, which draws the body’s immune cells to the site of the tumor where they destroy the cancer cells – leading to “potent tumor cell killing”. At the same time, CPMV activates B cells, cytotoxic cells and T cells to create an immune memory. The result is that the immune system fights the targeted tumor and seeks out metastatic tumors in other parts of the body.

"What we found most exciting is that although human immune cells are not infected by CPMV, they respond to it and are reprogrammed toward an activated state, which ultimately trains them to detect and eradicate cancerous cells,” Anthony Omole, a chemical and nano engineering postgraduate at the University of California - San Diego, said in a statement.

It is an effect that hasn’t been replicated by other plant viruses, which begs the question – why this particular virus?

To find out, Omole and colleagues compared CPMV with another plant virus. Cowpea chlorotic mottle virus (CCMV) was chosen because it is closely related to CPMV but does not prompt such an effective antitumor response. 

The team noted some similarities – both produced nanoparticles that were similar in size and both were taken up by the immune cells at a similar rate. However, there were two key differences. The first is that CPMV stimulated type I, II and III interferons (signalling proteins that help fend off infections and cancer cells), whereas CCMV stimulated pro-inflammatory interleukins (signalling proteins that protect against infection and inflammation). The second is that the RNAs of CPMV lasted longer, reaching the endolysosome where they activated toll-like receptor 7 (TLR7) – a protein that plays an important role in destroying tumors. Those of CCMV did not.

"This work gives us insight into how CPMV works so well,” said Omole. Now, Omole and the team are hoping to take CPMV to clinical trials. 

CPMV may be a long way off from being used in hospitals, but if clinical trials are successful, it is hoped that it could offer an effective and relatively affordable immunotherapy option for cancer patients. Other treatment options might be tricky and expensive to manufacture but CPMV “can be grown in plants using sunlight, soil and water," said Omole. 

The study is published in the journal Cell Biomaterials

Site içinde arama yapın
Kategoriler
Read More
Food
Why Don't You See Peanuts At Texas Roadhouse Anymore?
Why Don't You See Peanuts At Texas Roadhouse Anymore?...
By Test Blogger1 2025-08-31 13:00:05 0 764
Other
Market Size and Expansion in the US Green Technology and Sustainability Sector
  The US Green Technology and Sustainability Market size reflects the growing adoption of...
By Sssd Ddssa 2025-10-01 08:34:41 0 344
Oyunlar
Path of Exile 2 release date estimate - when does PoE 2 leave early access?
Path of Exile 2 release date estimate - when does PoE 2 leave early access? As an Amazon...
By Test Blogger6 2025-07-30 10:00:18 0 1K
Music
Cannibal Corpse Announce Fill-In For Longtime Guitarist on Tour
Cannibal Corpse Announce Fill-In For Longtime Guitarist on Upcoming 2025 U.S. TourMiikka...
By Test Blogger4 2025-09-03 20:00:08 0 627
Music
Ken Casey Discusses Dropkick Murphys' Legacy, New Album + More
'How the Hell Did That Happen' — Ken Casey Reflects on Nearly 30 Years of Dropkick MurphysKen...
By Test Blogger4 2025-07-18 11:00:02 0 1K