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Query: EC:3.5.4.1 (
cytosine deaminase
)
747
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The use of the
cytosine deaminase
(CD)/5-fluorocytosine suicide system as a cancer gene therapy approach enables selective killing of CD-modified cells as well as the ablation of non-modified
tumor
cells due to a bystander effect that has been suggested to involve the immune system in vivo. Using a stable CD transfectant of the tumorigenic rat adenocarcinoma cell line AS (AS/CD), an antitumoral response against the CD expressing cell line as well as the parental cell line could be induced by stepwise vaccinations in syngeneic animals. AS/CD
tumor
regression occurred independently of 5-fluorocytosine treatment and was sufficient to protect 37% of the animals against subsequent challenge with tumorigenic doses of the parental AS cell line. Immune rats contained lymphocytes able to specifically lyse CD modified as well as unmodified AS
tumor
cells in vitro, most likely contributing to the in vivo antitumoral reaction. Thus, the CD suicide system seems to be suitable not only for a local
tumor
gene therapy but also for the application as therapy of metastatic tumors and minimal residual disease.
...
PMID:Induction of protective immunity against syngeneic rat cancer cells by expression of the cytosine deaminase suicide gene. 1105 94
One of the impediments to the treatment of brain tumors (e.g., gliomas) has been the degree to which they expand, infiltrate surrounding tissue, and migrate widely into normal brain, usually rendering them "elusive" to effective resection, irradiation, chemotherapy, or gene therapy. We demonstrate that neural stem cells (NSCs), when implanted into experimental intracranial gliomas in vivo in adult rodents, distribute themselves quickly and extensively throughout the
tumor
bed and migrate uniquely in juxtaposition to widely expanding and aggressively advancing
tumor
cells, while continuing to stably express a foreign gene. The NSCs "surround" the invading
tumor
border while "chasing down" infiltrating
tumor
cells. When implanted intracranially at distant sites from the
tumor
(e.g., into normal tissue, into the contralateral hemisphere, or into the cerebral ventricles), the donor cells migrate through normal tissue targeting the
tumor
cells (including human glioblastomas). When implanted outside the CNS intravascularly, NSCs will target an intracranial
tumor
. NSCs can deliver a therapeutically relevant molecule-
cytosine deaminase
-such that quantifiable reduction in
tumor
burden results. These data suggest the adjunctive use of inherently migratory NSCs as a delivery vehicle for targeting therapeutic genes and vectors to refractory, migratory, invasive brain tumors. More broadly, they suggest that NSC migration can be extensive, even in the adult brain and along nonstereotypical routes, if pathology (as modeled here by
tumor
) is present.
...
PMID:Neural stem cells display extensive tropism for pathology in adult brain: evidence from intracranial gliomas. 1107 73
To increase the antitumor effects of
cytosine deaminase
(AdCD) gene therapy and induce more potent antitumor immunity, Th1 cytokine interleukin-18 encoded adenovirus (AdIL18) was combined with adenovirus encoding CD (AdCD) for the therapy of established murine B16 melanoma. Combination therapy of the
tumor
-bearing mice with AdIL 18 and AdCD/5FC inhibited the growth of the subcutaneous B16 tumors more significantly, compared with AdIL 18 or AdCD/5FC alone. In vivo depletion analysis with anti-CD4, anti-CD8 or anti-NK 1.1 McAb illustrated that both CD8+ T cells and CD4+ T cells played key roles in the augmented antitumor response of the combined therapy. Peptide/MHC tetramer represents a powerful and general tool for rapid, highly sensitive, and direct analysis of antigen-specific T cells. In this study, we prepared H-2Kb/TRP-2180-188 tetramer, which was demonstrated to bind H-2Kb-restricted, B16 melanoma-specific CD8+ T cells. B16 specific H-2Kb/TRP2180-188 tetramer was used to stain the
tumor
-specific CD8+ T cells and the results showed that CD8+ tetramer+ T cells were about 3-5% of the splenic CD8+ T cells derived from
tumor
-bearing mice after combined therapy. The CTL cytotoxicity was markedly induced in mice after combined therapy, suggesting efficient induction of
tumor
-specific CD8+ T cells after combined gene therapy with AdCD/5FC/AdIL18. IL-18 gene transfer could significantly augment the cytotoxicity of NK cells and macrophages, and increase the production of interleukin-2 and interferon-gamma, as compared with treatments with AdCD/5FC, AdlacZ/5FC or PBS. These data suggested that in vivo IL-18 gene transfer could augment the antitumor effects of CD suicide gene therapy through efficient induction of antitumor immunity.
...
PMID:Interleukin-18 gene transfer increases antitumor effects of suicide gene therapy through efficient induction of antitumor immunity. 1108 76
Utilization of molecular biology techniques offers attractive options in nuclear medicine for improving cancer imaging and therapy with radiolabeled peptides. Two of these options include utilization of phage-panning to identify novel
tumor
-specific peptides or single chain antibodies and gene transfer techniques to increase the number of antigen/receptor sites expressed on malignant cells. Our group has focused on the latter approach for improving radiolabeled peptide imaging and therapy. The most widely used gene transfer vectors in clinical gene therapy trials include retrovirus, cationic lipids, and adenovirus. We have utilized adenovirus vectors for gene transfer because of their ability to accomplish efficient in vivo gene transfer. Adenovirus vectors encoding the genes for a variety of antigens/receptors (carcinoembryonic antigen, gastrin-releasing peptide receptor, somatostatin receptor subtype 2 (SSTr2)) have all shown that their expression is increased on cancer cells both in vitro and in vivo following adenovirus infection. Of particular interest has been the adenovirus encoding for SSTr2 (AdCMVSSTr2). Various radioisotopes have been attached to somatostatin analogues for imaging and therapy of SSTr2-positive tumors both clinically and in animal models. The use of these analogues in combination with AdCMVSSTr2 is a promising approach for improving the detection sensitivity and therapeutic efficacy of these radiolabeled peptides against solid tumors. In addition, we have proposed the use of SSTr2 as a marker for imaging the expression of another cancer therapeutic transgene (e.g.
cytosine deaminase
, thymidine kinase) encoded within the same vector. This would allow for non-invasive monitoring of gene delivery to
tumor
sites.
...
PMID:Gene transfer strategies for improving radiolabeled peptide imaging and therapy. 1110 86
The efficacy of cancer gene therapy using bacterial
cytosine deaminase
(bCD)/5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) enzyme/prodrug strategy is limited by the inefficiency of
cytosine deaminase
(CD)-catalyzed conversion of 5-FC into 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). We have shown previously that yeast CD (yCD) is more efficient at the conversion of 5-FC than bCD. In the current study, we hypothesized that the increased production of 5-FU by yCD would enhance the efficacy of the CD/5-FC treatment strategy by increasing the bystander effect as well as the efficacy of radiotherapy because of the radiosensitizing capacity of 5-FU. To test this hypothesis, we generated stable HT29 human colon cancer cell lines expressing either bCD (HT29/bCD) or yCD (HT29/yCD). The amount of 5-FU produced in HT29/yCD tumors after a single injection of 5-FC (1000 mg/kg, i.p.) was 15-fold higher than that produced in HT29/bCD tumors. In
tumor
-bearing nude mice, the average minimum relative
tumor
size (compared with pretreatment values) of HT29/bCD tumors treated with 5-FC and radiation (500 mg/kg i.p. and 3 Gy, 5 days a week for 2 weeks) was 0.55+/-0.1, compared with 0.01+/-0.01 in HT29/yCD tumors (P = 0.002). Moreover, an increased cytotoxic and radiosensitizing effect of 5-FC on bystander cells was observed in vitro and in vivo when yCD was expressed in HT29 cells instead of bCD. In mice bearing HT29 tumors containing 10% HT29/yCD cells, the combined treatment resulted in a minimum
tumor
size of 0.20+/-0.07 compared with 0.60+/-0.1 in 10% HT29/bCD cells (P < 0.001). These results demonstrate that the use of yCD in the CD/5-FC strategy has a high potential to improve the therapeutic outcome of combined gene therapy and radiotherapy in cancer patients.
...
PMID:Yeast cytosine deaminase improves radiosensitization and bystander effect by 5-fluorocytosine of human colorectal cancer xenografts. 1111 48
To investigate the feasibility of repeated gene transfection in suicide gene therapy against human solid tumors by a combination of 5- fluorocytosine (5-FC) and its converting enzyme,
cytosine deaminase
(CD), we repeatedly transfected the yeast CD gene into the human pancreatic cancer cell line BXPC3 using the hemagglutinating virus of Japan-liposome in a new gene transfer method. The in vivo growth of the s.c. transplanted BXPC3
tumor
in nude mice given CD-gene transfection was significantly suppressed by i.p. injection of 5-FC when compared with tumors treated with the control vector. Furthermore, the
tumor
transfected with the CD gene during a 7-day interval was suppressed much more than that of a single transfection. These results suggest that repeated transfection of the suicide gene together with the combination of 5-FC and the yeast CD gene using the hemagglutinating virus of Japan-liposome gene transfer method may be useful for the treatment of human solid tumors, including pancreatic cancer.
...
PMID:Usefulness of repeated direct intratumoral gene transfer using hemagglutinating virus of Japan-liposome method for cytosine deaminase suicide gene therapy. 1119 52
Attenuated strains of Salmonella typhimurium, VNP20009 and YS7212, when injected systemically to
tumor
-bearing mice, accumulated preferentially in tumors at levels at least 200-fold and, more commonly, 1000-fold greater than in other normal tissues. This selectivity occurred in subcutaneously implanted murine tumors, including B16F10 melanoma, M27 lung carcinoma, and colon 38 carcinoma. The preferential accumulation was also manifested in animals bearing human
tumor
xenografts, including Lox, C8186, DLD1, SW620, HCT116, HTB177, DU145, MDA-MB-231, and Caki. Four to five days after a single IV injection of 1 x 10(6) colony-forming unit (cfu)/mouse, we routinely detected VNP20009 proliferation and accumulation at levels ranging from 1 x 10(8) to 2 x 10(9) cfu/g
tumor
. The amount of VNP20009 accumulated in the liver ranged from 3 x 10(4) to 2 x 10(6) cfu/g. The distribution of Salmonella in tumors was homogenous; YS7212 could be detected from the periphery to the interior portion of the tumors. Using mice with various immunodeficiencies, we also discovered the same preferential accumulation of Salmonella in tumors implanted in these mice. The use of Salmonella as a protein delivery vector was shown by IV administration of the bacteria expressing either green fluorescent protein (GFP) or
cytosine deaminase
(CD) into
tumor
-bearing mice. GFP and CD were detected in tumors, but not in livers, taken from mice inoculated with Salmonella carrying these genes. Bacteria accumulation and CD expression persisted in the tumors for up to 14 days after a single bolus IV administration of bacteria to
tumor
-bearing mice.
...
PMID:Tumor amplified protein expression therapy: Salmonella as a tumor-selective protein delivery vector. 1121 71
The potential of gene therapy to treat premalignant disease or recurrent cancer has not been investigated. The goal of the present investigation was to explore the efficacy of pro-drug-mediated, suicide gene therapy as a strategy to treat incipient
neoplasia
in stratified squamous epithelium. To test this strategy, a tissue model of premalignancy was generated by mixing normal human keratinocytes (NHK) that express the bacterial
cytosine deaminase
gene (CD) with premalignant keratinocytes which have been genetically marked with the bacterial gene for beta-galactosidase (II-4-beta-gal) in skin-like organotypic cultures. Preliminary studies in monolayer cultures demonstrated that CD-transduced NHK (NHK/CD) efficiently expressed the transgene and deaminated the pro-drug 5-fluorocytosine (5FC) to the toxic product 5-fluorouracil (5FU). The capacity of NHK/CD to kill II-4-beta-gal cells through bystander effect was assayed in both submerged culture and in the organotypic model of premalignancy. In submerged cultures, it was found that CD-mediated killing of II-4-beta-gal cells did not require cell-cell contact and that the LD(50) of 5FC for efficient bystander killing of II-4-beta-gal was 0.5 mM. When this concentration of pro-drug was used in organotypic cultures, a significant number of dysplastic II-4-beta-gal cells were eliminated from the tissue. Bystander killing of II-4-beta-gal cells was related to the number of NHK/CD present. These findings demonstrated that potentially malignant keratinocytes could be eliminated from a dysplastic tissue through activation of pro-drug and killing of adjacent cells through the bystander effect. By establishing an in vitro model to eliminate premalignant cells using suicide gene therapy, these studies provide a new approach for the treatment of incipient cancer as it develops, thereby preventing invasive disease.
...
PMID:Suicide gene therapy for premalignant disease: a new strategy for the treatment of intraepithelial neoplasia. 1131 95
A 2.4-kb truncated L-plastin promoter was inserted either 5' to the LacZ gene (Ad-Lp-LacZ) or 5' to the
cytosine deaminase
(CD) gene (Ad-Lp-CD) in a replication-incompetent adenoviral vector backbone. Infectivity and cytotoxicity experiments with the LacZ and CD vectors suggested that the L-plastin promoter-driven transcriptional units were expressed at much higher levels in explants of ovarian cancer cells from patients and in established ovarian or bladder cancer cell lines than they were in normal peritoneal mesothelial cells from surgical specimens, in organ cultures of normal ovarian cells, or in the established CCD minimal deviation fibroblast cell line. Control experiments showed that this difference was not attributable to the lack of infectivity of the normal peritoneal cells, the normal ovarian cells, or the minimal deviation CCD fibroblast cell line, because these cells showed expression of the LacZ reporter gene when exposed to the replication-incompetent adenoviral vector carrying the cytomegalovirus (CMV)-driven LacZ gene (Ad-CMV-LacZ). The Ovcar-5 and Skov-3 ovarian cancer cell lines exposed to the Ad-Lp-CD adenoviral vector were much more sensitive to the prodrug 5-fluorocytosine (5FC), which is converted from the 5FC prodrug into the toxic chemical 5-fluorouracil, than was the CCD minimal deviation fibroblast cell line after exposure to the same vector. A mouse xenograft model was used to show that the Ad-Lp-CD vector/5FC system could prevent engraftment of ovarian cancer cells in nude mice. Finally, injection of the Ad-Lp-CD vector into s.c.
tumor
nodules generated a greater reduction of the size of the
tumor
nodules than did injection of the Ad-CMV-LacZ vectors into
tumor
nodules. The Ad-Lp-CD vectors were as suppressive to tumor growth as the Ad-CMV-CD vectors. These results suggest that an adenoviral vector carrying the CD gene controlled by the L-plastin promoter (Ad-Lp-CD) may be of potential value for the i.p. therapy of ovarian cancer.
...
PMID:The use of the L-plastin promoter for adenoviral-mediated, tumor-specific gene expression in ovarian and bladder cancer cell lines. 1138 68
The presence of severe hypoxia and necrosis in solid tumors offers the potential to apply an anaerobic bacterial enzyme/prodrug approach in cancer treatment. In this context the apathogenic C. acetobutylicum was genetically engineered to express and secrete E. coli
cytosine deaminase
(CDase). Considerable levels of functional
cytosine deaminase
were detected in lysates and supernatants of recombinant C acetobutylicum cultures. After administration of the recombinant Clostridium to rhabdomyosarcoma bearing rats used as a model,
cytosine deaminase
could be detected at the
tumor
site. Moreover, following administration of the vascular targeting agent combretastatin A-4 phosphate significantly increased levels of
cytosine deaminase
were detected at the
tumor
site as a consequence of enlarged
tumor
necrosis and subsequently improved growth of C. acetobutylicum. The results provide evidence for the potential application of Clostrisdium-based therapeutic protein transfer to tumors in anticancer therapy.
...
PMID:Specific targeting of cytosine deaminase to solid tumors by engineered Clostridium acetobutylicum. 1139 82
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