Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:2.1.1.69 (BMT)
2,655 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We examined the antileukemic activity and the toxicity of HPC transduced with human tumor necrosis factor (TNF) cDNA. Both clonal (32Dcl3) and BM-derived primary hematopoietic progenitors (BM-Prog) expressing hTNF-alpha gene (32DTNF-alpha and BMTNF-alpha cells, respectively) inhibited the development of leukemia in mice with a small dose of 32Dp210 cells, a myeloid leukemia cell line. Whether the trans-gene expressing 32DTNF-alpha cells produce toxicities commonly associated with systemic TNF-alpha therapy was determined by examining the effect of TNF-alpha-secreting progenitor cells on body weight, tissue histology, growth of HPC, and engraftment of BMT. Administration of a low or high dose of TNF-alpha-secreting 32DTNF-alpha cells to mice failed to produce loss in body weight, a measure of TNF-alpha-related cachexia. There was also no evidence of tissue necrosis or mononuclear cell (MNC) infiltration in lung, liver, kidney, or intestine of mice injected with transduced progenitor cells. Furthermore, 32DTNF-alpha cells showed no effect on the clonal growth of HPC in colony-forming assays or loss of cellularity in BM, spleen, or blood. Finally, TNF-alpha-secreting cells were found not to interfere with the engraftment of BM transplant and hematopoietic reconstitution thereafter. We conclude from these findings that unlike systemic administration of TNF-alpha, TNF-alpha gene therapy with transduced HPC is nontoxic and may have a role in eradicating residual leukemia after BMT.
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PMID:TNF-alpha gene therapy with myeloid progenitor cells lacks the toxicities of systemic TNF-alpha therapy. 1041 46