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Query: UMLS:C0006142 (
breast cancer
)
160,383
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A recombinant adenovirus expressing Escherichia coli
cytosine deaminase
(AdCD) was constructed with the purpose of exploring its utility for the treatment of
breast cancer
. Infection of the human
breast cancer
cell line, MDA-MB-231, with AdCD resulted in high levels of
cytosine deaminase
enzyme activity. MDA-MB-231 cells infected with AdCD were 1000-fold more sensitive to 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) than cells infected with a control adenovirus. Cell mixing experiments indicated that only 10% of AdCD-infected cells in a population were needed to induce complete cytotoxicity of noninfectious cells exposed to 5-FC. This suggests that bystander effects play an important role in AdCD-mediated cytotoxicities. Direct injection of AdCD into human breast MDA-MB-231-derived tumors grown as xenografts in nude mice, followed by daily intraperitoneal injection 5-FC was sufficient to inhibit tumor growth. These results suggest that in vivo gene therapy for
breast cancer
using AdCD is feasible.
...
PMID:Enzyme/prodrug gene therapy approach for breast cancer using a recombinant adenovirus expressing Escherichia coli cytosine deaminase. 908 Jan 20
Ad.CMV-CD is a replication incompetent adenoviral vector carrying a cytomegalovirus (CMV)-driven transcription unit of the
cytosine deaminase
(CD) gene. The CD transcription unit in this vector catalyzes the deamination of the nontoxic pro-drug, 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC), thus converting it to the cytotoxic drug 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). This adenoviral vector prodrug activation system has been proposed for use in selectively sensitizing
breast cancer
cells, which may contaminate collections of autologous stem cells products from
breast cancer
patients, to the toxic effects of 5-FC, without damaging the reconstitutive capability of the normal hematopoietic cells. This system could conceivably kill even the nondividing
breast cancer
cells, because the levels of 5-FU generated by this system are 10 to 30 times that associated with systemic administration of 5-FU. The incorporation of 5-FU into mRNA at these high levels is sufficient to disrupt mRNA processing and protein synthesis so that even nondividing cells die of protein starvation. To test if the CD adenoviral vector sensitizes
breast cancer
cells to 5-FC, we exposed primary explants of normal human mammary epithelial cells (HMECs) and the established
breast cancer
cell (BCC) lines MCF-7 and MDA-MB-453 to the Ad.CMV-CD for 90 minutes. This produced a 100-fold sensitization of these epithelial cells to the effects of 48 hours of exposure to 5-FC. We next tested the selectivity of this system for BCC. When peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs), collected from cancer patients during the recovery phase from conventional dose chemotherapy-induced myelosuppression, were exposed to the Ad.CMV-CD for 90 minutes in serum-free conditions, little or no detectable conversion of 5-FC into 5-FU was seen even after 48 hours of exposure to high doses of 5-FC. In contrast, 70% of 5-FC was converted into the cytotoxic agent 5-FU when MCF-7
breast cancer
cells (BCCs) were exposed to the same Ad.CMV-CD vector followed by 5-FC for 48 hours. All of the BCC lines tested were shown to be sensitive to infection by adenoviral vectors when exposed to a recombinant adenoviral vector containing the reporter gene betagalactosidase (Ad.CMV-betagal). In contrast, less than 1% of the CD34-selected cells and their more immature subsets, such as the CD34+CD38- or CD34(+)CD33- subpopulations, were positive for infection by the Ad.CMV-betagal vector, as judged by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis, when exposed to the adenoviral vector under conditions that did not commit the early hematopoietic precursor cells to maturation. When artificial mixtures of hematopoietic cells and BCCs were exposed for 90 minutes to the Ad.CMV-CD vector and to 5-FC for 10 days or more, a greater than 1 million fold reduction in the number of BCCs, as measured by colony-limiting dilution assays, was observed. To test if the conditions were damaging for the hematopoietic reconstituting cells, marrow cells collected from 5-FU-treated male donor mice were incubated with the
cytosine deaminase
adenoviral vector and then exposed to 5-FC either for 4 days in vitro before transplantation or for 14 days immediately after transplantation in vivo. There was no significant decrease in the reconstituting capability of the male marrow cells, as measured by their persistence in female irradiated recipients for up to 6 months after transplantation. These observations suggest that adenovirus-mediated gene transfer of the Escherichia coli
cytosine deaminase
gene followed by exposure to the nontoxic pro-drug 5-FC may be a potential strategy to selectively reduce the level of contaminating BCCs in collections of hematopoietic cells used for autografts in
breast cancer
patients.
...
PMID:Cytosine deaminase adenoviral vector and 5-fluorocytosine selectively reduce breast cancer cells 1 million-fold when they contaminate hematopoietic cells: a potential purging method for autologous transplantation. 965 70
Peripheral blood progenitor harvests of
breast cancer
patients are contaminated with tumor cells, suggesting a potential role for these cells in the relapse after high-dose chemotherapy. Whereas physical purging methods do not eliminate contaminating tumor cells completely, pharmacological purging, although highly efficient, is hampered by a strong nonspecific toxicity toward hematopoietic progenitor cells. Taking advantage of the high efficiency of adenovirus-mediated gene transfer to epithelial cells, we selectively loaded
breast cancer
cells in vitro with a cytotoxic drug by gene transfer of the prodrug-converting enzyme
cytosine deaminase
(AdCMV.CD) and 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC). Despite the low dose of vector administered, limited exposure to 5-FC, and transplantation only of viable tumor cells into SCID mice, all animals that received cells treated in vitro with AdCMV.CD plus 5-FC were completely free of tumor development. These data show that the selective loading of tumor cells with AdCMV.CD/5-FC might be useful for purging of autografts.
...
PMID:Ex vivo breast cancer cell purging by adenovirus-mediated cytosine deaminase gene transfer and short-term incubation with 5-fluorocytosine completely prevents tumor growth after transplantation. 979 11
The success of chemotherapeutic intervention is limited because the necessary high local drug doses cannot be achieved without systemic toxicity. Application of suicide genes (SGs) and direct conversion of prodrugs (PDs) to toxic metabolites in situ by SGs may enhance the efficacy of chemotherapy. To evaluate this strategy in two murine
breast cancer
models, TS/A and GR, we injected cellulose sulfate capsules harboring cat kidney cells expressing the SGs
cytosine deaminase
and cytochrome P450 2B1 (CYP2B1) intratumorally. The PDs 5-fluorocytosine and ifosfamide were administered in 3-day intervals. The effect of in situ chemotherapy with each PD alone and the combination was analyzed over a period of 100 days. The results reveal that for TS/A tumors, the antitumoral effect mediated by CYP2B1 is more efficient than that of
cytosine deaminase
, whereas for GR tumors, both systems worked equally well. Furthermore, we find additive toxicity using both SG/PD systems for both TS/A and GR tumors.
...
PMID:Combined chemotherapy of murine mammary tumors by local activation of the prodrugs ifosfamide and 5-fluorocytosine. 1081 82
We constructed a series of adenoviral (Ad) vectors that express the Candida albicans
cytosine deaminase
(CD) suicide gene under the transcriptional control of either the human alpha-lactalbumin (ALA) or ovine beta-lactoglobulin (BLG) promoter (Ad.ALA.CD and Ad.BLG.CD, respectively). The Ad.ALA.CD and the Ad.BLG.CD vectors converted the prodrug 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) to the toxic nucleotide analog 5-fluorouracil in a
breast cancer
cell-specific manner, with a conversion rate of 40% and 52% in T47D cells and 50% and 41% in MCF7 cells, respectively. No significant conversion (< or =3%) was observed in an immortalized nontumorigenic breast epithelial cell line (MCF10A) and a human osteosarcoma cell line (U2OS). Adenovirus vector-based prodrug conversion of the 5-FC in T47D and MCF7 in the presence of 1 mg/mL of 5-FC led to cytotoxicity that resulted in a nearly complete cell death (> or =90%) after 5 days, whereas MCF10A and U2OS cells remained resistant (< or =10%). Nude mice harboring T47D-derived breast tumors that were injected intratumorally (i.t.) with therapeutic adenovirus vectors at a dose of 2 x 10(8) plaque-forming units and treated systemically with 5-FC at a concentration of 500 mg/kg/day showed a marked reduction in tumor mass within 30 days when compared with animals that received vector alone. Animal survival was significantly prolonged after 72 days in mice treated with therapeutic vectors in conjunction with prodrug when compared with control animals. These preclinical data are sufficiently promising to warrant further studies of this transcriptional targeting approach to
breast cancer
treatment.
...
PMID:Breast cancer-specific expression of the Candida albicans cytosine deaminase gene using a transcriptional targeting approach. 1088 14
Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) is a type-2 membrane protein expressed in the prostate, and it is highly expressed in metastatic or poorly differentiated adenocarcinomas. Moreover, PSMA expression is upregulated by androgen deprivation. These advantages make PSMA a useful target for prostate cancer therapy, especially in combination with conventional hormonal treatment. We recently reported that a prostate-specific enhancer is present in the third intron of the PSMA gene. In this study, we have further analyzed the activity of PSMA promoter/enhancer in prostate cancer cells and cells of other tissue origins (
breast cancer
MCF-7, lung cancer H157, and colorectal cancer HCT8 cells), and we have examined whether this construct could be used for efficient expression of the suicide gene,
cytosine deaminase
(CD), in vivo. The PSMA promoter/enhancer expressed the luciferase reporter gene in the prostate cancer lines LNCaP and C4-2, with 8- to 20-fold higher expression than the simian virus 40 promoter/enhancer, although it was inactive in the other cell lines. This construct efficiently drove the suicide gene CD, sensitizing C4-2 cells to 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) with the inhibitory concentration (IC(50)) <300 micromol/L in vitro. Athymic male nude mice bearing the transfected C4-2 cells were treated with intraperitoneal injections of either 5-FC (600 mg/kg) twice a day or saline solution for 3 weeks. C4-2 cell tumors were eliminated by 5-FC when they were expressing our therapeutic construct carrying CD under the regulatory control of the PSMA promoter/enhancer. Our results show the in vivo utility of the PSMA promoter/enhancer in a gene therapy situation targeting prostate cancer.
...
PMID:In vivo suicide gene therapy model using a newly discovered prostate-specific membrane antigen promoter/enhancer: a potential alternative approach to androgen deprivation therapy. 1150 68
Tumor cell contamination of clinical grafts is a major concern in autologous hematopoietic stem cell transplantation because these contaminating cells can contribute to relapse. In the present work, we use a suicide gene therapy approach that successfully accomplishes the two main goals of any purging strategy: highly efficient elimination of contaminating tumor cells and preservation of the engraftment capability of the hematopoietic progenitor cells. Human CD34(+) cells spiked with
breast cancer
cells were infected with an adenoviral vector encoding the
cytosine deaminase
transgene (Ad-CMV-CD). In vitro, transduction with Ad-CMV-CD followed by exposure to 400 micro M 5-fluorocytosine resulted in complete elimination of clonogenic contaminating tumor cells without affecting the clonogenic potential of the human hematopoietic CD34(+) cells. Transplantation of nonobese diabetic/LtSz-scid/severe combined immunodeficient (NOD/SCID) mice with nonpurged contaminated grafts and purged contaminated grafts, allowed us to test the safety and efficacy of our procedure in two independent purging experiments. Hematopoietic engraftment kinetics as well as the quantity and quality of human engraftment were not affected by the purging therapy. Results showed a significant difference in survival between the nonpurged group (28%) and the purged group (100%; P = 0.012). Moreover, highly sensitive histological and molecular analyses confirmed the absence of tumor cells in the recipients of purged marrow. In contrast, metastatic tumors were detected in animals that received nonpurged grafts. We anticipate that this strategy will result in a safe and efficacious hematopoietic graft product for autologous transplantation for patients with multiple forms of epithelial cancers.
...
PMID:Efficient and nontoxic adenoviral purging method for autologous transplantation in breast cancer patients. 1220 55
Adjuvant hyperthermia can improve treatment outcome for locally recurrent breast cancer (LRBC). Previously, we demonstrated that infection of human
breast cancer
cells with a recombinant adenovirus expressing beta-galactosidase from the human hsp70b gene promoter (Ad.70b.betagal) results in 50- to 800-fold increases in reporter gene expression following heat treatment (30 minutes at 43 degrees C). Here, we describe a heat-directed suicide gene therapy strategy based on an adenoviral vector (Ad.70b.CDTK) in which expression of the dual prodrug-activating E. coli
cytosine deaminase
/herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (CDTK) fusion gene is under the control of the hsp70b promoter. Treatment of T47D and MCF-7
breast cancer
cells with mild hyperthermia (43 degrees C/30 minutes) and prodrugs (100 microg/ml 5-fluorocytosine and 10 microg/ml ganciclovir) following infection with Ad.70b.CDTK (10-100 PFU/cell) resulted in 30- to 60-fold decreases in clonogenic survival relative to control cultures treated with heat or prodrugs alone. Clonogenic survival declined even further (up to 240-fold) following heat treatment at 41.5 degrees C for 120 minutes. A decreased clonogenic survival was accompanied by tumor cell apoptosis. These results demonstrate that this combined treatment strategy can be highly effective against heat- and radiation-resistant breast tumor cells and supports the continued development of heat-directed CDTK suicide gene therapy strategies for LRBC.
...
PMID:Heat-directed suicide gene therapy for breast cancer. 1267 2
Cytosine deaminase (CD) catalyzes the deamination of 5-fluorocytosine (5FC) to produce the highly toxic chemotherapeutic agent 5-fluorouracil (5FU). A unique feature of the CD/5FC enzyme/prodrug system is its ability to kill adjacent cells via bystander killing. Bystander killing of cancer cells can be mediated by non-cancerous accessory cells transduced with the CD gene; one type of non-cancerous accessory cell found in primary bone cancer and
breast cancer
metastases to bone is the osteoclast. This manuscript determines if osteoclast precursor cells, transduced with the CD gene, can function as a gene delivery system capable of killing cancer cells. An osteoclast precursor cell line (RAW 264.7, RAW) and authentic bone marrow-derived osteoclast precursor cells were transduced with a retroviral vector containing the
cytosine deaminase
fusion gene (NCD) composed of the human nerve growth factor receptor and CD genes. RAW cells and bone marrow-derived osteoclast precursor cells transduced with NCD expressed NCD protein and converted 5FC to 5FU. Treatment of NCD-transduced osteoclast precursor cells with the 5FC prodrug resulted in significant killing in vitro. NCD-transduced osteoclasts were co-cultured with either DsRed2-labeled sarcoma cells (2472-DSR) or green fluorescent protein (GFP)-labeled
breast cancer
cells (GFP-4T1). Treatment of the NCD osteoclast/tumor cell co-cultures with 5FC resulted in bystander killing of 2472-DSR cells (P < 0.006) and GFP-4T1 cells (P < 0.004). These findings demonstrate that NCD-transduced osteoclasts can promote killing of cancer cells and introduce the exciting possibility for developing osteoclast-mediated, CD-based treatment of primary bone cancers and
breast cancer
metastases to bone.
...
PMID:Osteoclasts direct bystander killing of cancer cells in vitro. 1613 79
We constructed a conditionally replication-competent adenoviral vector Ad.Lp-CD-IRES-E1A(control) in which the expression of both the prodrug-activating
cytosine deaminase
gene and the viral replication E1A gene were driven by the L-plastin tumor-specific promoter. In order to overcome the low infectivity of the adenoviral vectors for
breast cancer
cells, and to increase the safety and efficacy for cancer gene therapy, this vector was further modified on a transductional level by simultaneously ablating the native tropism of the vector to the primary CAR receptor and inserting a RGD-4C peptide into the HI loop of the fiber, which allows the vector to use the alphavbeta3 and alphavbeta5 receptors as alternative receptors. The resulting vector was named Ad.Lp-CD-IRES-E1A(MRGD). The transduction efficiency of the vector for
breast cancer
cell lines which have low expression level of CAR was increased both in vitro and in vivo. The Ad.Lp-CD-IRES-E1A(MRGD) vector produces a higher vector particle yield and a greater cytotoxic effect in tumor cells which have a low expression level of CAR, than did the Ad.Lp-CD-IRES-E1A(control) vector. Intratumoral injection of the Ad.Lp-CD-IRES-E1A(MRGD) vector following the intraperitoneal injection of 5FC into xenotransplanted human
breast cancer
cell lines which have low expression level of CAR led to greater degree of tumor regression in vivo than did the intratumoral injection of control adenoviral vectors not so modified.
...
PMID:Engineering conditionally replication-competent adenoviral vectors carrying the cytosine deaminase gene increases the infectivity and therapeutic effect for breast cancer gene therapy. 1617 27
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