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Abstracts
Immune responses to stress proteins: applications to infectious
disease and cancer.
Biotherapy 1998 10(3): 173-189
Mizzen L.
Stressgen Biotechnologies Corporation, Victoria,
BC, Canada.
Heat shock proteins, or stress proteins have been
identified as part of a highly conserved cellular defence mechanism
mediated by multiple, distinct gene families and corresponding gene
products. As intracellular chaperones, stress proteins participate
in many essential biochemical pathways of protein maturation and
function active during times of stress and during normal cellular
homeostasis. In addition to their well-characterized role as protein
chaperones, stress proteins are now realized to possess another
important biological property: immunogenicity. Stress proteins are
now understood to play a fundamental role in immune surveillance
of infection and malignancy and this body of basic research has
provided a framework for their clinical application. As key targets
of both humoral and cellular immunity during infection, stress proteins
have accordingly received considerable research interest as prophylactic
vaccines for infectious disease applications. The unique and potent
immunostimulatory properties of stress proteins have similarly been
applied to the development of new approaches to cancer therapy,
including both protein and gene-based modalities.
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