Splitting immunotoxins in half could increase their specificity toward cancers, study suggests.

‘When the toxin protein is split and goes into the human body as a cancer treatment, it can't harm healthy cells. If scientists find a way to get both pieces of the protein to enter a cancer cell, the two pieces of toxin can then destroy the cancer.’

Immunotoxins combine an immune substance with a toxin. The immune substance attaches to cancer cells, allowing the toxin to enter the cancer cell and kill it without harming nearby healthy cells.




The research was designed as a proof-of-concept study, but the researchers found that the functional toxin can be reconstructed in cancer cells in both laboratory cell cultures and in mice.
The search for a cancer cure has led to a number of treatments that destroy cancer cells, but also destroy healthy, non-cancerous cells. That destruction often causes life-threatening side effects.
"The problem is not to kill the healthy cells," said Dmitri Kudryashov, an associate chemistry professor at The Ohio State University and senior author of the study. "What is difficult is to kill only the cancer cells and nothing else."
And while some cancer treatments have been successful at targeting cancer cells, few have been able to do so without also affecting healthy cells.
Advertisement
"We have confirmed that when separated, the parts of the split toxin do not harm cells. But when they recombine into the original toxin, the treatment destroys the cancer.
Advertisement
Essentially, when the toxin protein is split and goes into the human body as a cancer treatment, it can't cause harm to healthy cells. But if biochemists can find a way to get both pieces of the protein to enter a cancer cell, the two pieces of toxin can then destroy the cancer.
Source-Eurekalert