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Query: UMLS:C0001486 (
Adenovirus
)
3,125
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Antitumor effects of combined transfer of suicide and cytokine genes were investigated in this study.
Adenovirus
harboring E. coli cytosine deaminase gene (AdCD) and adenovirus harboring murine granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor gene (AdGMCSF) were used simultaneously for in vivo gene transfer in melanoma-bearing mice. Growth inhibition of established tumors and prolongation of survival period were observed more significantly in tumor-bearing mice after transfection with AdGMCSF and AdCD followed by continuous injection of prodrug 5-fluorocytosine (5FC) when compared with mice treated with control adenovirus AdlacZ/5FC, AdCD/5FC or AdGMCSF alone (P < 0.01). After combined therapy the expression of MHC-I (H-2Db) and B7-1 molecules on freshly isolated tumor cells increased greatly and more dendritic cells and CD8+ T cells infiltrated into the tumor mass. The activity of specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes was also found to be induced more significantly after the combined therapy. Further experiments showed that apoptosis of tumor cells and induction of antitumor immune response might be involved in the mechanisms of the tumor cell killing by the combined therapy. Our results demonstrated that combined transfer of the GM-CSF and CD suicide genes, being able to inhibit the growth of melanoma synergistically and induce specific antitumor immune response efficiently, thus addressing the drawbacks of suicide gene therapy or cytokine gene therapy which were proved to be not satisfactory when used alone, might be of therapeutic potential for gene therapy of
cancer
.
...
PMID:Adenovirus-mediated GM-CSF gene and cytosine deaminase gene transfer followed by 5-fluorocytosine administration elicit more potent antitumor response in tumor-bearing mice. 1032 37
Adenovirus
(Ad) have been used as vectors to deliver genes to a wide variety of tissues. Despite achieving high expression levels in vivo, Ad vectors display normal tissue toxicity, transient expression, and antivector immune responses that limit therapeutic potential. To circumvent these problems, several retargeting strategies to abrogate native tropism and redirect Ad uptake through defined receptors have been attempted. Despite success in cell culture, in vivo results have generally not shown sufficient selectivity for target tissues. We have previously identified (C. K. Goldman et al.,
Cancer
Res., 57: 1447-1451, 1997) the fibroblast growth factor (FGF) ligand and receptor families as conferring sufficient specificity and binding affinity to be useful for targeting DNA in vivo. In the present studies, we retargeted Ad using basic FGF (FGF2) as a targeting ligand. Cellular uptake is redirected through high-affinity FGF receptors (FGFRs) and not the more ubiquitous lower-affinity Ad receptors. Initial in vitro experiments demonstrated a 10- to 100-fold increase in gene expression in numerous FGFR positive (FGFR+) cell lines using FGF2-Ad when compared with Ad. To determine whether increased selectivity could be detected in vivo, FGF2-Ad was administered i.v. to normal mice. FGF2-Ad demonstrates markedly decreased hepatic toxicity and liver transgene expression compared with Ad treatment. Importantly, FGF2-Ad encoding the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (TK) gene transduces Ad-resistant FGFR+ tumor cells both ex vivo and in vivo, which results in substantially enhanced survival (180-260%) when the prodrug ganciclovir is administered. Because FGFRs are up-regulated on many types of malignant or injured cells, this broadly useful method to redirect native Ad tropism and to increase the potency of gene expression may offer significant therapeutic advantages.
Cancer
Res 1999 Jun 01
PMID:Fibroblast growth factor 2 retargeted adenovirus has redirected cellular tropism: evidence for reduced toxicity and enhanced antitumor activity in mice. 1036 82
Evidence for a relationship between overexpression of wild-type p53 and telomerase activity remains controversial. We investigated whether p53 gene transduction could cause telomerase inhibition in pancreatic cancer cell lines, focusing on the relation of transduction to growth arrest, cell cycle arrest, and apoptotic cell death. The cells were infected with recombinant adenovirus expressing wild-type p53 or p21WAF1 at a multiplicity of infection of 100 or were continuously exposed to 10 microM VP-16, which is well known to induce apoptosis.
Adenovirus
-mediated p53 gene transduction caused G1 cell cycle arrest, apoptosis, and resultant growth inhibition in MIA PaCa-2 cells; the cell number 2 days after infection was 50% of preinfection value, and 13% of the cells were dead. Moreover, the transduction resulted in complete depression of telomerase activity through down-regulation of hTERT mRNA expression. In contrast, p21WAF1 gene transduction only arrested cell growth and cell cycle at G1 phase, and VP-16 treatment inhibited cell growth with G2-M arrest and apoptosis; after treatment, the cell number was 73% of pretreatment, and 12% of the cells were dead. Neither p21WAF1 gene transduction nor VP-16 treatment caused telomerase inhibition. Similar results were obtained in two other pancreatic cancer cell lines, SUIT-2 and AsPC-1. Thus, our results demonstrate that the p53 gene transduction directly inhibits telomerase activity, independent of its effects on cell growth arrest, cell cycle arrest, and apoptosis.
Clin
Cancer
Res 1999 Aug
PMID:Adenovirus-mediated p53 gene transduction inhibits telomerase activity independent of its effects on cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in human pancreatic cancer cells. 1047 98
Replication-deficient adenovirus vectors are efficient vehicles for delivering therapeutic genes into mammalian cells. However, the high doses required to produce effective gene transfer in vivo can also cause unwanted cellular toxicity. To improve replication-deficient adenovirus transgene expression while minimizing adverse reactions, we have tested polycationic compounds for their ability to enhance adenovirus adsorption. We demonstrate increased transgene expression after mixing adenovirus preparations with polycations, cationic lipids, and CaCl2 prior to transduction in vitro. An E1-deleted adenovirus vector was admixed with various polycations, and beta-galactosidase (beta-gal) activity was evaluated. The optimal polycation concentrations for augmenting adenovirus-mediated gene transfer were 5-10 microg/mL polybrene, 400 microg/mL protamine sulfate, 10 microg/mL N-(1-[2,3-dioleoyloxy]propyl)-N,N,N-trimethylammonium methylsulfate (DOTAP), 2.5 microg/mL Lipofectamine, and 62.5 mM CaCl2. Polycations enhanced beta-gal expression in three of six established cell lines. Similar results were obtained using primary tumor cell cultures, where beta-gal expression was increased 1.5- to 10.7-fold (mean = 3.6) by polybrene, 1.8- to 7.5-fold (mean = 3.4) by DOTAP, and 2.3- to 10.4-fold (mean = 4.8) by protamine sulfate.
Adenovirus
transduction efficiency in two primary leukemia isolates was improved by 3- and 4.5-fold. We were unable to demonstrate any benefit when adenovirus was admixed with protamine sulfate prior to intratumoral injection in a xenogeneic severe combined immunodeficient mouse melanoma tumor model. Further studies will determine whether polycations can improve intratumoral gene transfer.
Cancer
Gene Ther
PMID:Polycations and cationic lipids enhance adenovirus transduction and transgene expression in tumor cells. 1050 54
The distal short arm of human chromosome 1 (1p36) is commonly altered in primary hepatoma tumors and cell lines. This region includes the RIZ gene, a member of the PR (PRDI-BF1/BLIMP1 and RIZ homology) domain family of transcription factors. An unusual feature of this family is the yin-yang involvement in human cancers. Two products are normally produced from a PR family member which differ by the presence or absence of the PR domain; the PR-plus product is disrupted or underexpressed whereas the PR-minus product is present or overexpressed in
cancer
cells. The PR-plus product RIZ1 is a candidate tumor suppressor because it can induce G(2)/M arrest and/or apoptosis and is commonly underexpressed in breast cancer. Here, we have investigated the role of RIZ in hepatoma. RIZ1 transcript was undetectable in 80% of hepatoma cell lines (8 of 10 lines examined). RIZ1 expression was also decreased in hepatoma tumor specimens. In contrast, RIZ2 transcript was uniformly present in all samples examined.
Adenovirus
-mediated RIZ1 expression in hepatoma cell lines caused cell cycle arrest in G(2)/M and/or programmed cell death. RIZ1 expression also suppressed tumorigenicity of hepatoma cells in nude mice. Our observations reinforce the yin-yang notion of RIZ gene products in human
cancer
and suggest a RIZ1 tumor suppressor role in hepatoma.
Int J
Cancer
1999 Nov 12
PMID:Decreased RIZ1 expression but not RIZ2 in hepatoma and suppression of hepatoma tumorigenicity by RIZ1. 1050 92
A brief summary of the mechanisms involved in photodynamic therapy (PDT) and the role of delivery vehicles for photosensitizer targeting is addressed. Phthalocyanines (Pc) have been coupled to adenovirus type 2 capsid proteins including the hexon, the penton base and the fiber to enhance their target selectivity.
Adenovirus
penton base proteins contain the arginine-glycine-aspartic acid peptidic sequence (RGD) motif known to bind with great affinity and high specificity to integrin receptors, expressed by several types of
cancer
. Tetrasulfonated aluminum phthalocyanine (AlPcS4) was covalently coupled to the various capsid proteins via one or two caproic acid spacer chains (A1 or A2) in 7:1 up to 66:1 molar ratios. The capacity of the bioconjugates for singlet oxygen production, as measured by an L-tryptophan oxidation assay, was strongly reduced, likely reflecting scavenging by the carrier. Cell adsorption and in vitro photocytotoxicity assays were carried out using the A549 and HEp2 human cell lines expressing integrin receptors, and one murine, the EMT-6 cell line, which lacks receptors for the RGD sequence. The AlPcS4A2-protein complexes induced greater cytotoxicity as compared to the analogous AlPcS4A1 preparations. The penton base-AlPcS4A2 derivative was the more phototoxic for all cell lines tested. Tumor response studies using Balb/c mice with EMT-6 tumor implants demonstrated that the free AlPcS4A2 induced complete tumor regression at a dose of 1 mumol/kg and 400 J/cm2, which is comparable to the activity of the known AlPcS2adj. A mixture of adenovirus type 2 soluble proteins covalently labeled with AlPcS4A2 required 0.5 mumol/kg to induce the same response with the same light dose, suggesting that the high affinity RGD/receptor complex is able to target Pc for PDT.
...
PMID:Photodynamic therapy: tumor targeting with adenoviral proteins. 1054 49
Inoperable adenocarcinoma in colon or lung shows resistance to conventional anti-
cancer
therapy. For these cancers, the feasibility of transcriptionally targeted killing of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)-producing adenocarcinoma cells was investigated.
Adenovirus
vectors carrying a CEA promoter to express E. coli lacZ (AdCEALacZ) or herpes simplex thymidine kinase (AdCEATK) were made and their in vitro and in vivo tumoricidal effects on CEA-producing or non-producing colon and lung cancer cells were evaluated. In vitro infection with AdCEALacZ showed significantly higher CEA promoter-driven lacZ expression in CEA-producing adenocarcinoma cells including VMRC-LCD and LoVo than in CEA-non-producing cells. AdCEATK-infected LoVo showed higher sensitivity to ganciclovir than control vector-infected LoVo or AdCEATK-infected HeLa both in vitro and in subcutaneously implanted tumors of nude mice. Moreover, total tumor elimination in vivo was achieved by either pre-infection of as few as 30% of cells comprising tumors or by direct in vivo injection of AdCEATK to pre-established LoVo tumors. In addition, CEA promoter-driven lacZ expression in LoVo cells was enhanced by the addition of interleukin-6 (IL-6) in vitro. These results provide a rationale for CEA-promoter-driven, adenovirus-mediated gene therapy for CEA-producing adenocarcinomas in colon and lung with reduced toxicity to normal cells.
...
PMID:Transcriptionally targeted in vivo gene therapy for carcinoembrionic antigen-producing adenocarcinoma. 1059 10
Despite encouraging preclinical studies in many tumor types including head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC), initial clinical trials with adenovirus-mediated gene therapy have been disappointing. Although the adenovirus is a "highly efficient vector," it is still limited by the extent of effective in vivo transduction. In our studies with multiple human HNSCC cell lines, we have noted a variation in both in vitro and in vivo responses to the same recombinant adenovirus therapeutic construct. We hypothesize that adenovirus receptor density among tumor cell populations, even of the same histology, greatly influences transduction efficiency and therapeutic results of a variety of adenovirus-based gene therapy strategies. To investigate this hypothesis, the numbers of adenovirus receptors on three well-characterized HNSCC cell lines were determined. Marker and cytokine gene transfer efficiencies as well as therapeutic outcomes after adenovirus-mediated tumor suppressor gene and suicide gene therapies were evaluated and correlated with receptor status. A 5-fold variation in adenovirus receptor density was identified among the HNSCC cell lines (P < 0.002, t test). This variation directly correlated with adenovirus type 5 (Ad5)-mediated green fluorescent protein marker gene and Ad5-interleukin 2 cytokine gene transfer efficiency and resulting protein expression in each individual cell line. The receptor density also directly correlated with therapeutic response after Ad5-thymidine kinase or Ad5-p16 gene transfer in each HNSCC line. The role of the adenovirus receptor in gene transfer efficiency was further supported by recombinant Ad5 fiber knob blocking experiments. The marker gene transfer was increasingly blocked by the same concentration of Ad5 recombinant fiber knob in relation to decreasing levels of adenovirus receptor in the HNSCC lines. An Ad5 recombinant construct that carries the shared coxsackie and adenovirus receptor (CAR) was created and used to up-regulate receptors on each cell line. Ad5-CAR infection significantly increased Ad5-beta-Gal gene transfer efficiency and expression (P = 0.0003, Mann-Whitney test). This increased marker gene expression remained consistent with the established pattern of gene transfer efficiency among the HNSCC cell lines. These data confirm the importance of the adenovirus receptor on individual tumor cell lines with respect to investigating novel adenovirus-mediated gene therapy strategies. This work further supports consideration of assaying adenovirus receptor status, even in tumors of the same histology from patients enrolled in gene therapy clinical trials.
Adenovirus
receptor status may prove valuable for selecting or stratifying patients as well as assessing outcomes among patients within adenovirus-based
cancer
gene therapy trials.
Clin
Cancer
Res 1999 Dec
PMID:Variability of adenovirus receptor density influences gene transfer efficiency and therapeutic response in head and neck cancer. 1063 57
A range of luciferase reporter vectors was constructed, incorporating 5'-flanking sequences from the prostate-specific antigen (PSA), human glandular kallikrein 2 (hKLK2), and cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoters for expression control. Tissue specificity was evaluated in the PSA-positive line LNCaP and PSA-negative cells from different tissues of origin (CoLo320, DG75, EJ, A2780, and Jurkat). The minimal 628-bp PSA and hKLK2 promoters showed only low-level expression in either PSA-positive or PSA-negative cells and showed no increase with the addition of androgen. Tandem duplication of the PSA promoter slightly increased expression in PSA-positive LNCaP cells. The addition of CMV enhancer sequences upstream of a single PSA or hKLK2 promoter substantially but nonspecifically increased luciferase expression in all cell lines tested. However, placing a 1455-bp PSA enhancer sequence upstream of either the PSA or hKLK2 promoters increased expression 20-fold in the PSA-positive cell line LNCaP but not in the PSA-negative lines. Tandem duplication of the PSA enhancer increased expression to approximately 50-fold higher than either promoter alone while retaining tissue-specific control. The level of expression was reduced by the addition of a third copy of the PSA enhancer. Expression from all enhancer constructs was increased 100-fold above basal levels when induced with the androgen dihydrotestosterone, with the PSA-based constructs consistently exhibiting roughly twice the level of expression of the hKLK2-based constructs at all androgen concentrations.
Adenovirus
vectors were produced in which either enhanced green fluorescent protein or nitroreductase could be expressed from the optimized PSA double enhancer-promoter construct and evaluated in LNCaP cells and the bladder-derived line EJ. Control vectors with the CMV promoter gave good levels of expression in both cell lines, whereas the PSA constructs only produced detectable levels of protein in the LNCaP cells as assessed by fluorescence of enhanced green fluorescent protein or by Western blotting of nitroreductase. LNCaP but not EJ cells were selectively sensitized to the prodrug CB1954 following infection with Ad-PSA(EEP)-NR. The PSA-based nitroreductase virus produced comparable amounts of nitroreductase and sensitization to CB1954 approaching that of the CMV-driven virus. Plasmid and adenovirus constructs combining PSA enhancer and promoter sequences demonstrate selective expression of linked genes in PSA-positive cells. The expression is induced by androgen and gives therapeutically relevant levels of effector proteins.
Cancer
Res 2000 Jan 15
PMID:Prostate-specific antigen promoter/enhancer driven gene therapy for prostate cancer: construction and testing of a tissue-specific adenovirus vector. 1066 85
The immune system confers protection against a variety of pathogens and contributes to the destruction of neoplastic cells. Foreign major histocompatibility complex (MHC) protein serves as a potent stimulus to the immune system. In this report, a mouse H-2Kb gene was introduced into two poorly immunogenic tumor cell lines, a mouse colonic carcinoma cell line, MCA-26 (H-2Kd), and a rat mammalian carcinoma cell line, LN-4, in an effort to stimulate tumor rejection. Our results showed that the expression of xenogeneic MHC class I antigen completely abolished the LN-4 tumorigenicity in rats, whereas the expression of allogeneic MHC class I antigen only partially reduced the MCA-26 tumorigenicity in mice. Rats with tumor regression of LN-4/H-2Kb developed a T helper type 1-dominant response, whereas rats with LN-4 tumor growth developed a T helper type 2-dominant response. The immunized rats that experienced LN-4/H-2Kb tumor regression further developed protective immunity against a subsequent challenge of LN-4 cells. This protective immunity was mediated by the LN-4 tumor-specific cellular immune response against both the transduced and the parental LN-4 cells. Recombinant adenoviral vectors are highly efficient at in vitro and in vivo gene delivery. The LN4 cells transfected with the recombinant adenovirus AdV-H-2Kb in vitro expressed the cell surface H-2Kb molecule by fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis.
Adenovirus
-mediated H-2Kb gene transfer in vivo can further significantly inhibit pre-established LN-4 tumors. Those rats with complete tumor regression further developed protective immunity against the subsequent challenge of a parental LN-4 tumor. Therefore, our study indicates that the adenovirus-mediated transfer of xenogeneic MHC class I gene may be an effective alternative to the current protocol of
cancer
gene therapy in which the allogeneic MHC class I gene is used.
Cancer
Gene Ther 2000 Jan
PMID:Adenoviral transfer of xenogeneic MHC class I gene results in loss of tumorigenicity and inhibition of tumor growth. 1067 54
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