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Query: UMLS:C0017638 (
glioma
)
30,880
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The first large randomized phase III trial in gene therapy demonstrated no improvement in the survival of patients injected with packaging cells that produced conventional replication-defective retroviral vectors carrying the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene, a disappointing result that was attributed to extremely poor levels of transduction efficiency. To circumvent this problem, we have developed a modified replication-competent retrovirus (RCR) that is capable of transducing human
glioma
cell lines A-172, U-87, T-98G, U-373, and U-138 and rat
glioma
cell lines C6 and 9L, over multiple infection cycles in vitro, resulting in a tremendous enhancement in transduction efficiency over conventional replication-defective retroviral vectors at the same dose. Whereas the transduction efficiency of conventional retroviral vectors injected into preestablished subcutaneous U-87 tumors at a dose of 1.0 x 10(5) transducing units (TU) was only 0.2% at 6 weeks postinjection, the same dose of RCR vector resulted in up to 97.2% transduction. When RCR vectors at a dose of 1.0 x 10(4) TU were injected into preestablished intracranial U-87 tumors, transduction efficiency at 2 and 3 weeks was 74 and 98.1%, respectively. Notably, however, intracranial injection of RCR vectors did not result in detectable infection of normal brain cells. Furthermore, using a sensitive polymerase chain reaction assay, no detectable RCR signal could be observed in any extracerebral tissues, including lung, liver, kidney, upper gastrointestinal tract (esophagus and stomach), lower gastrointestinal tract (colon and small intestine), skin, spleen, and bone marrow. Treatment of U-87 intracranial gliomas with RCR vectors carrying the yeast
cytosine deaminase
suicide gene followed by 5-fluorocytosine prodrug administration resulted in 100% survival over a 60-day follow-up period, compared with 0% survival of control groups receiving vector alone or prodrug alone. Our results demonstrate that RCR vectors can achieve therapeutically significant levels of transduction in malignant human gliomas, and that RCR vector spread after intratumoral injection is restricted to the tumor itself.
...
PMID:Highly efficient and tumor-restricted gene transfer to malignant gliomas by replication-competent retroviral vectors. 1261 63
For the development of efficient and safe gene therapy protocols for clinical application it is desirable to determine the tissue dose of vector-mediated therapeutic gene expression noninvasively in vivo. The herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase gene (HSV-1-tk) has been shown to function as a marker gene for the direct noninvasive in vivo localization of thymidine kinase (TK) expression by positron emission tomography (PET). Using bicistronic or multicistronic gene-expressing cassettes with tk as the PET marker gene, the quantitative analysis of tk gene expression may indirectly indicate the distribution and the level of expression of linked and proportionally coexpressed genes. Here, we describe the construction and functional evaluation of HSV-1 amplicon vectors mediating proportional coexpression of HSV-1-tk as PET marker gene and the enhanced green fluorescent protein gene (gfp) as proof of principle and cell culture marker gene and the Escherichia coli
cytosine deaminase
(cd) as therapeutic gene. Several double-/triple-gene constructs expressing HSV-1-tk, gfp, and E. coli cd were engineered based on gene fusion or the use of an internal ribosome entry site (IRES). Functional analysis in cell culture (green fluorescent protein [GFP] fluorescence and sensitivity to the prodrugs ganciclovir [GCV] and 5-fluorocytosine [5-FC]) and Western blots were carried out after infection of proliferating rat 9L gliosarcoma and human Gli36
glioma
cells with helper virus-free packaged HSV-1 amplicon vectors. To study the ability of PET to differentiate various levels of tk expression noninvasively in vivo, retrovirally transduced and selected populations of rat F98 and human Gli36dEGFR
glioma
cells with defined levels of proportionally coexpressed tk and gfp genes were grown as subcutaneous tumors in nude rats and nude mice, and tk imaging by PET was performed. To study HSV-1 amplicon vector-mediated gene coexpression in vivo, HSV-1 amplicon vectors bearing coexpression constructs were injected (4 x 10(7) to 1 x 10(8) transducing units) into subcutaneously growing Gli36dEGFR gliomas in nude animals, and tk imaging was performed 24 hr later. All vector constructs mediated GFP expression and sensitized 9L and Gli36 cells toward GCV- and 5-FC-mediated cell killing in a drug dose-dependent manner, respectively. The levels of gene expression varied depending on the location of the genes within the constructs indicating the influence of the IRES on the level of expression of the second gene. Moreover, functional proportional coexpression of the PET marker gene HSV-1-tk and the linked therapeutic E. coli cd gene was observed. In selected tumor cell populations, subtle IRES-dependent differences of tk gene expression could be noninvasively distinguished by PET with good correlation between quantitative assays for IRES-dependent attenuated GFP and TK expression in culture and in vivo. After infection of subcutaneously growing gliomas with HSV-1 amplicon vectors, various levels of TK expression were found ranging from 0.011-0.062 percentage injected dose per gram (%ID/g). These values were 4.0- to 5.7-fold lower than positive control tumor cells. TK expression could be imaged by PET in vivo even with the tk gene located at the weak position downstream from the IRES. In conclusion, these HSV-1 amplicon vectors carrying HSV-1-tk as PET marker gene and any linked therapeutic gene will serve an indirect noninvasive assessment of the distribution of therapeutic gene expression by PET. Monitoring the correlation between primary transduction and therapeutic efficiency of a given vector is highly desirable for the development of safe and efficient gene therapy and vector application protocols in clinical applications.
...
PMID:Improved herpes simplex virus type 1 amplicon vectors for proportional coexpression of positron emission tomography marker and therapeutic genes. 1263 7
Since neural progenitor cells can engraft stably into brain tumors and differentiate along the neuronal and glial line, we tested the hypothesis that transplanted
cytosine deaminase
(CD)-expressing ST14A cells (an immortalized neural progenitor cell line) can convert locally 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) into 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) and produce a regression of
glioma
tumors. ST14A, retrovirally transduced with the E. coli CD gene, showed a strong bystander effect on
glioma
cells as assessed by in vitro assay. Intracerebral injection of C6
glioma
cells generated a rapidly growing tumoral mass. DiI prelabeled ST14A, coinjected into the rat brain with C6
glioma
cells, survived in the tumoral mass up to 10 days and their number was not affected by in vivo 5-FC treatment. In contrast, a significant decrease of the
glioma
tumoral mass (-50%) was observed in 5-FC-treated rats. 5-FC had no effect on the tumor in the absence of CD-expressing ST14A cells. Our results support the feasibility of systems based on intratumoral transplantation of prodrug-converting cells for brain tumor therapy.
...
PMID:Transplantation of prodrug-converting neural progenitor cells for brain tumor therapy. 1271 9
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the antitumor effects of
cytosine deaminase
/5-fluorocytosine (CD/5-FC) suicide gene therapy system on human malignant
glioma
cells in vitro. The pCMVCD plasmid was constructed through the CD gene insertion in the multicloning site of eukaryotic expression vector pcDNA3.0, and confirmed by restriction endonuclease digestion/gene sequencing. The construct was subsequently transfected into the U251 human malignant
glioma
cells by using LipofectAMINE2000-mediated method. Resistant clones (named U251/CD cells) were isolated by screening with G418 presence. U251/CD cells were incubated with 5-FC in different concentrations to determine viability ratios (or cytotoxicity assay), measured by the 3-(4,5-dimethylthiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyltetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay. The concentrations of 5-fluorouracil (5-FU) in the media were measured by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) detector. Our results suggested that the untreated U251 cells were insensitive to 5-FC, with the IC(50) about 6500 micromol/L. After transfection, the IC(50) was dramatically reduced to about 10 micromol/L. Therefore, gene transfection made G418-resistant clones (U251/CD cells) be highly sensitive to 5-FC. HPLC analysis showed that 5-FU was detected in U251/CD cell medium. Study on U251 cells genetically modified by CD gene in vitro will play an essential role in
glioma
gene therapy in vivo. In conclusion, our results indicated that the CD/5-FC system was feasible to treat
glioma
.
...
PMID:Effects of CD/5-FC suicide gene therapy system on human malignant glioma cells in vitro. 1276 3
The remarkable migratory and tumor-tropic capacities of neural stem cells (NSCs and/or neuroprogenitor cells) represent a potentially powerful approach to the treatment of invasive brain tumors, such as malignant gliomas. We have previously shown that whether implanted directly into or at distant sites from an experimental intracranial
glioma
, NSCs distributed efficiently throughout the main tumor mass and also tracked advancing tumor cells, while stably expressing a reporter transgene. As therapeutic proof-of-concept, NSCs genetically modified to produce the prodrug activating enzyme
cytosine deaminase
(CD), effected an 80% reduction in the resultant tumor mass, when tumor animals were treated with the systemic prodrug, 5-fluorocytosine. We now extend our findings of the tumor-tropic properties of NSCs (using a well-characterized, clonal NSC line C17.2), by investigating their capacity to target both intracranial and extracranial tumors, when administered into the peripheral vasculature. We furthermore demonstrate their capacity to target extracranial non-neural tumors such as prostate cancer and malignant melanoma. Well-characterized NSC lines (lacZ and/or CD-positive) were injected into the tail vein of adult nude mice with established experimental intracranial and/or subcutaneous flank tumors of neural and non-neural origin. The time course and distribution of NSCs within the tumor and internal organs was assessed in various models. Resulting data suggest that NSCs can localize to various tumor sites when injected via the peripheral vasculature, with little accumulation in normal tissues. Our findings suggest the novel use of intravascularly administered NSCs as an effective delivery vehicle to target and disseminate therapeutic agents to invasive tumors of neural and nonneural origin, both within and outside of the brain.
...
PMID:Intravascular delivery of neural stem cell lines to target intracranial and extracranial tumors of neural and non-neural origin. 1467 Jan 28
Previously, we evaluated the therapeutic efficacy of the adenovirus-mediated transduction of the
cytosine deaminase
(CD) gene and 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) for malignant gliomas. However, the molecular pathways that mediate the 5-FC/CD gene therapy-induced cell death remains to be elucidated. In this study, we examined the induction of apoptosis and the role of caspases in 5-FC/CD gene therapy using human malignant
glioma
cells [Gli36delta5 (mutated p53) and U87MG (wild p53)]. The treatment with 5-FC/CD gene-therapy-induced apoptosis both in Gli36delta5 cells and in U87MG cells according to flow cytometric analysis. Immunoblot analysis revealed that caspases 3 and 9 were processed in response to 5-FC/CD in a concentration- and time-dependent manner, but caspase 8 was not. Each caspase 3 and 9 inhibitor significantly reduced apoptosis triggered by 5-FC/CD, but the caspase 8 inhibitor did not affect apoptosis induction. 5-FC/CD significantly promoted the release of cytochorme c from mitochondria in a concentration-dependent manner. These results indicate that 5-FC/CD gene therapy induces apoptosis in human malignant
glioma
cells and that the apoptotic cell death is mediated by the activation of mitochondrial caspase cascades involving caspases 3 and 9. This is the first report concerning the apoptotic mechanism of 5-FC/CD gene therapy, and these findings could be used to increase the efficacy of suicide gene therapy systems for the treatment of malignant
glioma
.
...
PMID:Apoptosis induction with 5-fluorocytosine/cytosine deaminase gene therapy for human malignant glioma cells mediated by adenovirus. 1501 77
To evaluate noninvasive measures of gene expression and tumor response in a gene-dependent enzyme prodrug therapy (GDEPT), a bifunctional fusion gene between Saccharomyces cerevisiae
cytosine deaminase
(CD) and Haemophilus influenzae uracil phosphoribosyltransferase (UPRT) was constructed. CD deaminates 5-fluorocytosine (5FC) to 5-fluorouracil (5FU), and UPRT subsequently converts 5FU to fluorouridine monophosphate, and both of these reactions can be monitored noninvasively in vitro and in vivo using 19F magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS). Following transient transfection the CD-UPRT fusion protein exhibited both UPRT and CD enzymatic activities as documented by 19F MRS. In addition, an increase in CD activity and thermal stability was witnessed for the fusion protein compared to native CD. Stable expression of CD-UPRT in 9L
glioma
cells increased both 5FC and 5FU sensitivity in vitro compared to CD-expressing and wild-type 9L cells. Noninvasive 19F MRS of both CD and UPRT gene function in vivo demonstrated that in animals bearing CD-expressing tumors there was limited conversion of 5FC to 5FU with no measurable accumulation of cytotoxic fluorinated nucleotides (F-nucs). In contrast, CD-UPRT-expressing tumors had increased CD gene activity with a threefold higher intratumoral accumulation of 5FU and significant generation of F-nucs. Finally, CD-UPRT yielded increased efficacy in an orthotopic animal model of high-grade
glioma
. More importantly, early changes in cellular water mobility, which are felt to reflect cellular death, as measured by diffusion-weighted MRI, were predictive of both durable response and increased animal survival. These results demonstrate the increased efficacy of the CD-UPRT GDEPT compared to CD alone both biochemically and in a preclinical model and validate both 19F MRS and diffusion-weighted MRI as tools to assess gene function and therapeutic efficacy.
...
PMID:The use of 19F spectroscopy and diffusion-weighted MRI to evaluate differences in gene-dependent enzyme prodrug therapies. 1550 9
Suicide gene transfer using thymidine kinase (TK) and ganciclovir (GCV) treatment or the
cytosine deaminase
(CD)/5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) system represents the most widely used approach for gene therapy of cancer. However, molecular pathways and resistance mechanisms remain controversial for GCV-mediated cytotoxicity, and are virtually unknown for the CD/5-FC system. Here, we elucidated some of the cellular pathways in
glioma
cell lines that were transduced to express the TK or CD gene. In wild-type p53-expressing U87 cells, exposure to GCV and 5-FC resulted in a weak p53 response, although apoptosis was efficiently induced. Cell death triggered by GCV and 5-FC was independent of death receptors, but accompanied by mitochondrial alterations. Whereas expression of Bax remained unaffected, in particular, GCV and also 5-FC caused a decline in the level of Bcl-2. Similar findings were obtained in 9L and T98G
glioma
cells that express mutant p53, and also underwent mitochondrial apoptosis in both the TK/GCV and CD/5-FC system. Upon treatment of 9L cells with 5-FC, Bcl-xL expression slowly declined, whereas exposure to GCV resulted in the rapid proapoptotic phosphorylation of Bcl-xL. These data suggest that TK/GCV- and CD/5-FC-induced apoptosis does neither require p53 nor death receptors, but converges at a mitochondrial pathway triggered by different mechanisms of modulation of Bcl-2 proteins.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of thymidine kinase/ganciclovir and cytosine deaminase/ 5-fluorocytosine suicide gene therapy-induced cell death in glioma cells. 1559 11
Replication-competent adenoviruses could provide an efficient method for delivering therapeutic genes to tumors. The most promising strategies among adenovirus-based oncolytic systems are designed to exploit free E2F-1 activity in cancer cells, which in the absence of pRb activates transcription and regulates the expression of genes involved in differentiation, proliferation, and apoptosis. We previously developed Delta24, an E1A-mutant, conditionally replicative oncolytic adenovirus. Here, we examine the ability of a second-generation Delta24 (Delta24-hyCD) engineered to express a humanized form of the Saccharomyces cerevisiae
cytosine deaminase
gene (hyCD). Real-time quantitative PCR, Western blotting, thin-layer chromatography, and radioisotope quantitative enzymatic assays confirmed the production of a catalytically active hyCD enzyme in the setting of an oncolytic infection in vitro; other experiments assessing local production of 5-fluorouracil and a concomitant bystander effect showed improved cytotoxicity. The IC50 dose of 5-fluorocytosine (5-FC) required for a complete cytopathic effect by the Delta24-hyCD virus was fivefold lower than with Delta24 alone in U251MG and U87MG malignant
glioma
(MG) cell lines. Intratumoral treatment of mice bearing intracranial U87MG xenografts with Delta24-hyCD+5-FC significantly improved survival, confirming that Delta24-hyCD with 5-FC is a more efficient anticancer tool than Delta24 alone. Histopathologically, Delta24-hyCD replication was accompanied by progressively augmented oncolysis and drug-induced necrosis. These findings demonstrate that Delta24-hyCD with concomitant systemic 5-FC is a significant improvement over the earlier Delta24 oncolytic tumor-selective strategy for therapy of experimental gliomas.
...
PMID:Delta24-hyCD adenovirus suppresses glioma growth in vivo by combining oncolysis and chemosensitization. 1565 Jul 66
The E. coli PNP suicide gene sensitizes solid tumors to nucleoside prodrugs, such as 6-methylpurine-2'-deoxyriboside (MeP-dR). In this study using lentiviral, MuLv, and HSV-based gene transfer, we quantified thresholds for inhibition of tumor growth and bystander killing by E. coli PNP and tested the role of intestinal flora in this process. Regressions of human
glioma
tumors following retroviral transduction exhibited dose dependence on both the level of PNP expression and the dose of MeP-dR administered, including strong tumor inhibition when 90-99% bystander cells comprised the tumor mass. A replication competent, non-neurovirulent herpes simplex virus (HSV) deficient in both copies of the gamma-1 34.5 gene was next engineered to express E. coli PNP under the egr-1 promoter (HSV-PNP). HSV-PNP injected intratumorally (17 million pfu/0.05 ml) in nude mice bearing 300 mg human
glioma
flank tumors produced a delay in tumor growth (approximately 24 days delay to one doubling). MeP-dR treatment after antibiotic therapy (to eliminate enteric flora encoding PNP enzymes) resulted in antitumor enhancement, with arrest of tumor growth (delay to doubling >50 days). Bystander killing of the magnitude described here has been difficult to accomplish with other suicide genes, such as HSV-tk or
cytosine deaminase
. The results establish a model for applying E. coli PNP to HSV treatment of
glioma
.
...
PMID:Antibiotic-mediated chemoprotection enhances adaptation of E. coli PNP for herpes simplex virus-based glioma therapy. 1581 29
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