A Unique Protein Adjuvant for Precision Immunotherapy to Prevent Recurrence of Surgically Resected Colorectal Cancer.
Effectively activating protective CD8 T cell immunity specifically against cancer antigens is an important pathway to prevent the growth of various types of cancers.
APA
Suzuki Y, Mani R, Evers BM (2026). A Unique Protein Adjuvant for Precision Immunotherapy to Prevent Recurrence of Surgically Resected Colorectal Cancer.. Cancers, 18(6). https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers18061003
MLA
Suzuki Y, et al.. "A Unique Protein Adjuvant for Precision Immunotherapy to Prevent Recurrence of Surgically Resected Colorectal Cancer.." Cancers, vol. 18, no. 6, 2026.
PMID
41899604
Abstract
Effectively activating protective CD8 T cell immunity specifically against cancer antigens is an important pathway to prevent the growth of various types of cancers. A major obstacle in this approach is variations in cancer antigens among patients. A valuable material to overcome the antigen variation among cancer patients is the use of each individual's own cancer cells for immunization. In colorectal cancer (CRC), approximately one-third of the patients who receive curative surgical resection have a recurrence of cancer. Therefore, the use of surgically resected CRC for immunotherapy to specifically activate the protective CD8 T cells against their own cancer cells is a valuable approach to prevent the recurrence of cancer. However, since cancer-specific antigens are often not strongly immunogenic, a potent immunostimulant is required as an adjuvant for efficiently facilitating the activation of cancer-specific protective CD8 T cells. We recently identified that a protein molecule, the amino-terminus region of the dense granule protein 6 (GRA6Nt) of , selectively activates innate expressions of IFN-γ and IL-18 and functions as a powerful adjuvant when used in immunization with nonreplicable (treated with mitomycin C or irradiated) MC38 CRC cells to potently activate the cytotoxic activity and IFN-γ production of CD8 T cells against cancer cells. In addition, immunization using the GRA6Nt protein adjuvant effectively inhibits the growth of identical CRC cells after its challenge implantation, which mimics a recurrence of the surgically resected CRC used for the immunizations. In contrast to the two nucleotide- or deoxynucleotide-based Toll-like receptor agonists currently being used as adjuvants in cancer immunotherapy in clinical settings, GRA6Nt is a protein molecule. Thus, the rGRA6Nt protein adjuvant provides a new pathway in cancer immunotherapy to effectively activate the protective CD8 T cells specific for the individual's cancer cells to prevent the recurrence of surgically resected CRC in patients.
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