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Dive into the research topics where Michael H. Shearer is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael H. Shearer.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2006

DNA vaccines: successes and limitations in cancer and infectious disease.

Devin B. Lowe; Michael H. Shearer; Ronald C. Kennedy

Vaccination with plasmid DNA is an active area of investigation that is being applied to diseases including cancer and microbial pathogens associated with infectious diseases. Since its discovery, great progress has been made with the administration of DNA vaccines to initiate specific and effective immune responses against targeted illnesses. However, many obstacles still face its use in prophylactic and therapeutic vaccination scenarios. The nature of these difficulties alongside the successes and future of plasmid DNA will be discussed. J. Cell. Biochem. 98: 235–242, 2006.


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2007

Towards progress on DNA vaccines for cancer

Devin B. Lowe; Michael H. Shearer; Cynthia Jumper; Ronald C. Kennedy

Abstract.Cancer immunotherapy faces many obstacles that include eliciting immune reactions to self antigens as well as overcoming tumor-derived immunosuppressive networks and evasion tactics. Within the vaccine arsenal for inhibiting cancer proliferation, plasmid DNA represents a novel immunization strategy that is capable of eliciting both humoral and cellular arms of the immune response in addition to being safely administered and easily engineered and manufactured. Unfortunately, while DNA vaccines have performed well in preventing and treating malignancies in animal models, their overall application in human clinical trials has not impacted cancer regression to date. Since the establishment of these early trials, progress has been made in terms of increasing DNA vaccine immunogenicity and subverting the suppressive properties of tumor cells. Therefore, the success of future plasmid DNA use in cancer patients will depend on combinatorial strategies that enhance and direct the DNA vaccine immune response while also targeting tumor evasion mechanisms.


Cancer Cell International | 2009

INTS6/DICE1 inhibits growth of human androgen-independent prostate cancer cells by altering the cell cycle profile and Wnt signaling

Stephanie Filleur; Jennifer Hirsch; Aline Wille; Margarete Schön; Christian Sell; Michael H. Shearer; Thomas Nelius; Ilse Wieland

BackgroundThe gene encoding integrator complex subunit 6 (INTS6), previously known as deleted in cancer cells 1 (DICE1, OMIM 604331) was found to be frequently affected by allelic deletion and promoter hypermethylation in prostate cancer specimens and cell lines. A missense mutation has been detected in prostate cancer cell line LNCaP. Together, these results suggest INTS6/DICE1 as a putative tumor suppressor gene in prostate cancer. In this study, we examined the growth inhibitory effects of INTS6/DICE1 on prostate cancer cells.ResultsMarkedly decreased INTS6/DICE1 mRNA levels were detected in prostate cancer cell lines LNCaP, DU145 and PC3 as well as CPTX1532 as compared to a cell line derived from normal prostate tissue, NPTX1532. Exogenous re-expression of INTS6/DICE1 cDNA in androgen-independent PC3 and DU145 cell lines substantially suppressed their ability to form colonies in vitro. This growth inhibition was not due to immediate induction of apoptosis. Rather, prostate cancer cells arrested in G1 phase of the cell cycle. Expression profiling of members of the Wnt signaling pathway revealed up-regulation of several genes including disheveled inhibitor CXXC finger 4 (CXXC4), frizzled homologue 7 (FZD7), transcription factor 7-like 1 (TCF7L1), and down-regulation of cyclin D1.ConclusionThese results show for the first time a link between INTS6/DICE1 function, cell cycle regulation and cell-cell communication involving members of the Wnt signaling pathway.


International Reviews of Immunology | 2003

A role for antibodies in tumor immunity.

Ronald C. Kennedy; Michael H. Shearer

Recent advances have demonstrated the clinical utility of specific monoclonal antibodies that recognize tumor-associated antigens on the surface of the tumor cell in the treatment of breast cancer and B cell lymphoma in humans. In addition to these studies, an experimental tumor model, where antibodies that recognize a viral-encoded tumor-specific antigen play a major role in tumor immunity, will be discussed. Together, these studies implicate antibodies as a means of providing tumor immunity against some cancers. The necessity for designing cancer vaccines that induce antibodies with specificity for antigens on the tumor cell will be discussed. antibodies immunity tumors


Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2007

SV40 association with human malignancies and mechanisms of tumor immunity by large tumor antigen

Devin B. Lowe; Michael H. Shearer; Cynthia Jumper; Ronald C. Kennedy

Abstract.SV40 was discovered as a contaminate of poliovirus vaccine lots distributed to millions of individuals in the United States between 1955 and 1963 while contaminated vaccine batches were later circulated worldwide. After SV40 was observed to cause in vitro animal and human cell transformations and in vivo tumor formations in animals, the search for a connection between the virus and human malignancies has continued to the present day. Different molecular methods have been used to detect SV40 gene products in a variety of human cancers, though SV40 causality in these tumor types has yet to be established. These data, however, are not without controversial issues related to inconclusive SV40 serological and epidemiological evidence alongside tools and methodologies that may contribute to false-positive results in human specimens. This review will also explore how vaccination against SV40 protein products may be used to help prevent and treat individuals with SV40-expressing cancers.


Journal of Asthma | 2006

Exhaled Nitric Oxide in Asthma: Variability, Relation to Asthma Severity, and Peripheral Blood Lymphocyte Cytokine Expression

Goutam P. Shome; Joel Starnes; Michael H. Shearer; Ronald C. Kennedy; Anthony Way; Ahmed A. Arif; Sharma Prabhakar

Exhaled nitric oxide has been used as a means of indirectly measuring the underlying inflammation in asthma. The objectives of the study were to measure exhaled nitric oxide levels in asthma patients and healthy volunteers, to study peripheral blood lymphocyte cytokine expression, and to study the relationship between exhaled nitric oxide and intracellular cytokine expression. Exhaled nitric oxide was elevated in patients with moderate to severe asthma and with treatment decreased in the first week reaching to a near normal level by 4 weeks. Elevated exhaled nitric oxide was associated with decreased IL-4 and IL-13 cytokine expression by CD8 lymphocytes.


Journal of Virology | 2011

CD4+ T Lymphocytes Are Critical Mediators of Tumor Immunity to Simian Virus 40 Large Tumor Antigen Induced by Vaccination with Plasmid DNA

Joel F. Aldrich; Devin B. Lowe; Michael H. Shearer; Richard Winn; Cynthia Jumper; Robert K. Bright; Ronald C. Kennedy

ABSTRACT A mechanistic analysis of tumor immunity directed toward the viral oncoprotein simian virus 40 (SV40) large tumor antigen (Tag) has previously been described by our laboratory for scenarios of recombinant Tag immunization in BALB/c mice. In the present study, we performed a preliminary characterization of the immune components necessary for systemic tumor immunity induced upon immunization with plasmid DNA encoding SV40 Tag as a transgene (pCMV-Tag). Antibody responses to SV40 Tag were observed via indirect enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay following three intramuscular (i.m.) injections of pCMV-Tag and were typified by a mixed Th1/Th2 response. Complete tumor immunity within a murine model of pulmonary metastasis was achieved upon two i.m. injections of pCMV-Tag, as assessed by examination of tumor foci in mouse lungs, without a detectable antibody response to SV40 Tag. Induction-phase and effector-phase depletions of T cell subsets were performed in vivo via administration of depleting rat monoclonal antibodies, and these experiments demonstrated that CD4+ T lymphocytes are required in both phases of the adaptive immune response. Conversely, depletion of CD8+ T lymphocytes did not impair tumor immunity in either immune phase and resulted in the premature production of antibodies to SV40 Tag. Our findings are unique in that a dominant role could be ascribed to CD4+ T lymphocytes within a model of DNA vaccine-induced tumor immunity to Tag-expressing tumor cells. Additionally, our findings provide insight into the general mechanisms of vaccine-induced tumor immunity directed toward tumors bearing distinct tumor-associated antigens.


Virology | 2008

Evidence of simian virus 40 exposure in a colony of captive baboons

Landon W. Westfall; Michael H. Shearer; Cynthia Jumper; Gary L. White; James F. Papin; R. Eberle; Janet S. Butel; Robert K. Bright; Ronald C. Kennedy

Simian virus 40 (SV40) is a polyomavirus for which non-human primates are the permissive host. The baboon (Papio spp.) is an old world monkey that is used in a variety of research investigations; however, natural infection of SV40 among baboons has not been thoroughly examined or reported. Initially, we were interested in determining the prevalence of SV40 infection among a captive colony of baboons based on the presence of antibodies to SV40 large T-antigen (Tag). An overall seroprevalence rate of >50% was found after screening sera from 142 baboons in the colony based on ELISA. Endpoint titer values for serum antibody binding to SV40 Tag reached as high as 1280 for 5 out of 142 baboons. Peptide binding assays revealed that a range of SV40 Tag epitopes are immunogenic in the baboon, and that individual animals differ in their humoral immune responses to SV40 Tag based on epitope recognition. Specificity to SV40 Tag and not some other primate polyomavirus encoded large Tag was further examined by serologic reactivity to peptide epitopes unique to SV40 Tag. Additional serology was performed to assess SV40 Tag reactivity by Western blot and whether antibodies were capable of neutralizing SV40 infectivity in vitro. Although antibodies with high levels of SV40 neutralization were observed in a number of the baboons, there was a lack of correlation between viral neutralization and antibodies to SV40 Tag. Further examination using molecular-based diagnosis and SV40 Tag specific real-time quantitative PCR determined that some of the baboons appeared to be exposed to SV40. DNA sequence analysis of the PCR products confirmed that SV40 Tag specific sequences were detected in baboons.


Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | 2004

Anti-idiotype responses abrogate anti-CD4–induced tolerance to a tumor-specific antigen and promote systemic tumor immunity

Ronald C. Kennedy; Michael H. Shearer; Devin B. Lowe; Cynthia Jumper; Maurizio Chiriva-Internati; Robert K. Bright

Purpose: Immunologic-based cancer treatment modalities represent an active area of investigation. Included in these strategies are passive administration of monoclonal antibodies which recognize tumor-associated antigens and active vaccination with identified tumor antigens. However, several problems associated with these types of treatment strategies have been identified. Methods: In this report, we address certain issues by employing a murine model for experimental pulmonary metastasis and a tumor antigen vaccination strategy that induces complete tumor immunity in this system. Utilizing this model, we attempt to address issues related to unresponsiveness to tumor antigen immunization induced by passive administration of a rat monoclonal anti-CD4 and the induction of anti-idiotype responses to a passively administered monoclonal antibody and the effects on the induction of tumor immunity. Results: The results presented indicate that passive administration of rat monoclonal anti-CD4 exhibits immunosuppressive effects that inhibit the production of antibodies to the tumor antigen immunization and abolishes tumor immunity. Repeated administration of the rat monoclonal anti-CD4 results in an anti-idiotype response that can abrogate unresponsiveness to tumor antigen immunization and promote systemic tumor immunity. Conclusions: The data examine a number of potential problems associated with immunologic-based treatments for cancer. These problems include the potential for tolerance to the tumor antigen and establishing an immunocompromised state where immunization with a tumor antigen failed to generate tumor immunity. Approaches to eliminate tolerant T cells by targeting anti-CD4 via anti-idiotype responses that could be generated in vivo without CD4+ T cells allowed for recovery of nontolerant T cells, and an antibody response to the tumor antigen that results in tumor immunity.


Cancer Immunology, Immunotherapy | 2013

The role of gamma interferon in DNA vaccine-induced tumor immunity targeting simian virus 40 large tumor antigen

Joel F. Aldrich; Michael H. Shearer; Devin B. Lowe; Richard Winn; Cynthia Jumper; Ronald C. Kennedy; Robert K. Bright

The central role of CD4+ T lymphocytes in mediating DNA vaccine-induced tumor immunity against the viral oncoprotein simian virus 40 (SV40) large tumor antigen (Tag) has previously been described by our laboratory. In the present study, we extend our previous findings by examining the roles of IFN-γ and Th1-associated effector cells within the context of DNA immunization in a murine model of pulmonary metastasis. Immunization of BALB/c mice with plasmid DNA encoding SV40 Tag (pCMV-Tag) generated IFN-γ-secreting T lymphocytes that produced this cytokine upon in vitro stimulation with mKSA tumor cells. The role of IFN-γ as a mediator of protection against mKSA tumor development was assessed via in vivo IFN-γ neutralization, and these experiments demonstrated a requirement for this cytokine in the induction immune phase. Neutralization of IFN-γ was associated with a reduction in Th1 cytokine-producing CD4+ and CD8+ splenocytes, as assessed by flow cytometry analysis, and provided further evidence for the role of CD4+ T lymphocytes as drivers of the cellular immune response. Depletion of NK cells and CD8+ T lymphocytes demonstrated the expendability of these cell types individually, but showed a requirement for a resident cytotoxic cell population within the immune effector phase. Our findings demonstrate the importance of IFN-γ in the induction of protective immunity stimulated by pCMV-Tag DNA-based vaccine and help to clarify the general mechanisms by which DNA vaccines trigger immunity to tumor cells.

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Ronald C. Kennedy

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Devin B. Lowe

University of Pittsburgh

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Cynthia Jumper

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Robert K. Bright

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Gary L. White

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Jennifer Hirsch

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Joel F. Aldrich

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Maurizio Chiriva-Internati

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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Richard Winn

Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center

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