Immunocompetent murine models for the study of glioblastoma immunotherapy

Tae-Min Oh(Northwestern University), Shayan Fakurnejad(Northwestern University), Eli T. Sayegh(Neurological Surgery), Allan Clark(Neurological Surgery), Michael E. Ivan(Neurological Surgery), Matthew Z. Sun(University of California, San Francisco), Michael Safaee(Neurological Surgery), Orin Bloch(Neurological Surgery), C. David James(University of California, San Francisco), Andrew T. Parsa(Neurological Surgery)
Journal of Translational Medicine
January 1, 2014
Cited by 251Open Access
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Abstract

Glioblastoma remains a lethal diagnosis with a 5-year survival rate of less than 10%. (NEJM 352:987-96, 2005) Although immunotherapy-based approaches are capable of inducing detectable immune responses against tumor-specific antigens, improvements in clinical outcomes are modest, in no small part due to tumor-induced immunosuppressive mechanisms that promote immune escape and immuno-resistance. Immunotherapeutic strategies aimed at bolstering the immune response while neutralizing immunosuppression will play a critical role in improving treatment outcomes for glioblastoma patients. In vivo murine models of glioma provide an invaluable resource to achieving that end, and their use is an essential part of the preclinical workup for novel therapeutics that need to be tested in animal models prior to testing experimental therapies in patients. In this article, we review five contemporary immunocompetent mouse models, GL261 (C57BL/6), GL26 (C57BL/6) CT-2A (C57BL/6), SMA-560 (VM/Dk), and 4C8 (B6D2F1), each of which offer a suitable platform for testing novel immunotherapeutic approaches.


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