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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) gene is normally expressed in fetal liver and is transcriptionally silent in adult liver but is reactivated in
hepatocellular carcinoma
. It has been shown that the positive and negative transcriptionally regulatory elements of the human AFP gene, which play an important role in its developmental regulation, exist over the quite extended region (4 kb). We constructed a hybrid gene consisting of
herpes simplex
virus thymidine kinase (HSV-tk) gene under the control of the 0.3-kb human AFP gene promoter and inserted it into a retroviral vector. When AFP-producing
hepatoma
cells were infected with this recombinant retrovirus (LNAF0.3TK virus), the cells expressed HSV-tk gene and exhibited increased sensitivity to ganciclovir parallel with the ability of AFP production. On the other hand, the retroviral infection had little effect on ganciclovir-mediated cytotoxicity in AFP-nonproducing
hepatoma
or non-
hepatoma
cells. Moreover, the addition of dexamethasone increased the cytotoxicity of aciclovir to the virus-infected, AFP-producing cells through a glucocorticoid-responsive element in the AFP promoter, although aciclovir, by itself, had little cytotoxicity. These results demonstrate that the AFP promoter sequence alone can provide enough tumor-specific activity for therapeutic gene expression and induce selective growth inhibition by ganciclovir in the virus-infected, AFP-producing human
hepatoma
cells. In addition, it is possible that expression of the therapeutic gene is modulated by administration of dexamethasone or other agents that alter AFP promoter activity after gene transduction.
...
PMID:Gene therapy for hepatoma cells using a retrovirus vector carrying herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene under the control of human alpha-fetoprotein gene promoter. 754 12
A retroviral vector carrying
herpes simplex
virus thymidine kinase gene was constructed, and transfected into the psi 2 packaging cells. The replication-defective retrovirus produced by this cell line (psi 2 tkn cells) was transduced into XC rat
hepatoma
cells, from which a cell line (XCtkn2) highly sensitive to ganciclovir was cloned. Ganciclovir suppressed the growth of XCtkn2
hepatoma
and psi 2tkn cells. Both of these HSV-tk-carrying cells treated with ganciclovir showed potent 'bystander effect' on co-culturing with genetically unmodified XC
hepatoma
cells. In addition, intratumoral injection of XCtkn2 and psi 2tkn cells into the XC hepatomas transplanted in nude mice and subsequent ganciclovir administration suppressed in vivo growth of the hepatomas. Flow cytometry disclosed that the ganciclovir-treatment increased the relative number of XCtkn2
hepatoma
and psi 2tkn cells at the G2 phase of the cell cycle. However, the nuclear fragmentation and internucleosomal DNA cleavage were not observed, indicating that the death of XCtkn2
hepatoma
and psi 2tkn cells treated with ganciclovir was not apoptotic.
...
PMID:Gene therapy of hepatoma: bystander effects and non-apoptotic cell death induced by thymidine kinase and ganciclovir. 755 97
Most patients with
hepatocellular carcinoma
have an elevated alpha-feto-protein (AFP) level. This high level of AFP expression is transcriptionally controlled by the 5'-flanking sequence of the AFP gene. Using the 5'-flanking sequence as a promoter for the
herpes simplex
virus thymidine kinase (HSV-TK) gene in an adenoviral vector (Av1AFPTK1), the therapeutic efficacy of adenovirus-mediated HSV-TK gene transduction, followed by ganciclovir (GCV) administration, was studied in tumors in athymic nude mice. Av1AFPTK1 transduction of two cell lines demonstrated HSV-TK enzyme activity only in the AFP-producing cells (HuH7) and not in the AFP nonproducing cells (SK-Hep-1). As expected, only transduced HuH7 cells were killed by GCV treatment. Transduction by an adenoviral vector harboring a Rous sarcoma virus promoter and HSV-TK gene (Av1TK1) showed enzymatic activity and GCV killing in both cell lines. All HuH7 tumors that were transduced with either Av1AFPTK1 or Av1TK1 completely regressed after GCV treatment. On the other hand, there was complete regression of SK-Hep-1 tumors only when treated with Av1TK1 and GCV and not when treated with Av1AFPTK1 and GCV. Thus, cell-specific killing was achieved by adenoviral vector containing AFP promoter for the HSV-TK gene and GCV treatment.
...
PMID:Adenovirus-mediated gene therapy of hepatocellular carcinoma using cancer-specific gene expression. 758 89
We have analyzed the ability of a recombinant replication-defective adenovirus to transfer the thymidine kinase gene of
herpes simplex
virus (HSV-tk) into
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
) cells to confer sensitivity to ganciclovir. Three
HCC
cell lines (Hep3B, PLC/PRF/5, and HepG2) were efficiently infected in vitro by a recombinant adenovirus carrying lacZ reporter gene (AdCMVlacZ). Expression of HSV-tk in
HCC
cells infected with a recombinant adenovirus carrying HSV-tk gene (AdCMVtk) induced sensitivity to ganciclovir in a dose-dependent manner. A bystander killing effect was observed when 90% of uninfected tumor cells were mixed with only 10% of AdCMVtk-infected cells. These data show that recombinant adenoviruses are efficient vectors for transduction of drug-sensitizing genes to
HCC
cells in vitro. We suggest that a gene therapy approach to
hepatocellular carcinoma
can be established using adenoviral transfer of HSV-tk to tumor cells and subsequent administration of ganciclovir.
...
PMID:Induction of sensitivity to ganciclovir in human hepatocellular carcinoma cells by adenovirus-mediated gene transfer of herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase. 760 2
In this work, we have studied the activity of a tetracycline modulatable trans-activator (tTA) generated by fusing the DNA binding domain of the tetracycline repressor to the trans-activation domain of the
Herpes simplex
virus protein 16 (HSV VP16) (plasmid pUHD15-1Neo). In the three different cell lines studied (HTC, rat
hepatoma
; T47D, human breast cancer; SK-N-BE, human neuroblastoma), the expression of the luciferase gene under the control of a tetracycline operator sequence (plasmid pUHC13-3) was used as a control of the incorporation and the functionality of the trans-activator. Clones selected from these cells responded in a time and dose-dependent manner to the withdrawal of tetracycline. In all these clones, the tTA trans-activator not only modulates the activity of the luciferase gene, but also modulates the activity of a number of endogenous proteins, including C/EBP beta, the glucocorticoid receptor (GR), and SP1. In the transfected cells, the level of these transcription factors was strongly inhibited in the presence of tetracycline and was highly increased after tetracycline removal. Electrophoresis mobility shift assay (EMSA) and footprint experiments proved that the induced proteins are perfectly efficient in binding the DNA. Their transcriptional activity was also determined. In HTC/A9 cells, the level of the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) expression driven by the promoter of the alpha 1-glycoprotein (AGP) gene was strongly enhanced at 72-84 hr following removal of tetracycline from the growth media. The accumulation of the endogenous AGP mRNA also increased at 84 hr. In the T47D/TA11 and SK-N-BE/C2.6 cells, a general activation of protein synthesis was also evidenced.
...
PMID:Specificity of action of a herpes virus VP16/tetracycline-dependent trans-activator in mammalian cell cultures. 764 13
HNF1 and C/EBP alpha are transcription factors that bind to and trans-activate the human albumin gene proximal promoter. Various 5' deletions of the human albumin promoter were coupled to a luciferase reporter gene (alb-luc constructs) and co-electroporated with HNF1 and/or C/EBP alpha expression vectors into HeLa cells. Luciferase activities from co-electroporation of the HNF1 and C/EBP alpha expression vectors with the alb-luc constructs were approximately 10-fold greater than the sum of the activities achieved with HNF1 and C/EBP alpha alone. Analysis of COOH-terminal or internal deletions of the HNF1 expression vector revealed that the domain important for collaborative interaction with C/EBP alpha could be localized to a 157 amino acid region not previously described. This domain is proline and glutamine-rich and is highly homologous (66%) to a portion of vHNF1, an evolutionarily related gene first identified in dedifferentiated
hepatoma
cells. A construct linking the negatively charged activation domain of
herpes simplex
virus protein VP16 to the DNA-binding domain of HNF1 showed that it could also synergize with C/EBP alpha to trans-activate the human albumin gene promoter. Our studies delineate a domain in HNF1 important for synergistic activation with C/EBP alpha.
...
PMID:The transcription factor HNF1 acts with C/EBP alpha to synergistically activate the human albumin promoter through a novel domain. 828 79
We have investigated whether adenovirally mediated gene transfer of the
herpes simplex
thymidine kinase gene to human
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
) cell lines can sensitize these cells to the prodrug ganciclovir and thereby provide a therapeutic option for this intractable cancer. Two replication-deficient adenoviruses encoding for the
herpes simplex
virus type-1 (HSV) thymidine kinase (TK) gene were generated in which expression of TK is under the control of either the human cytomegalovirus immediate early promoter (CMV) or the human alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) promoter/enhancer. We demonstrate that the combination of adenovirally mediated TK gene transfer and ganciclovir treatment effectively inhibits proliferation and causes cell death of
HCC
cells in vitro and that in vivo TK gene transfer and ganciclovir treatment inhibits hepatocellular tumor growth in a mouse model of this cancer. Furthermore, we show that expression of the TK gene can be restricted to those HCCs that express the tumor marker AFP through the incorporation of the AFP enhancer/promoter within an adenoviral vector.
...
PMID:Gene therapy for hepatocellular carcinoma: chemosensitivity conferred by adenovirus-mediated transfer of the HSV-1 thymidine kinase gene. 852 62
We have developed a recombinant replication-defective adenovirus containing human alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) promoter/enhancer to direct cell type-specific expression of the
herpes simplex
virus thymidine kinase (HSVtk) gene to AFP-producing
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
) cells. After an in vitro infection by a recombinant adenovirus carrying the lacZ gene under the control of human AFP promoter/enhancer (AdAFPlacZ), an expression of the lacZ gene was demonstrated efficiently in AFP-producing HuH-7 and HepG2 cell lines, but not in AFP-nonproducing HLE and HLF cell lines, although lacZ gene expression was demonstrated in all these cell lines when infected with adenovirus vector carrying lacZ gene driven by the beta-actin-based promoter. Expression of the HSVtk gene by adenovirus, from AFP promoter/enhancer (AdAFPtk) induced the cells sensitive to ganciclovir (GCV) in the AFP-producing cell line efficiently, but not in AFP-nonproducing HLF
hepatoma
cells. An in vitro bystander effect was observed when only 10% of the cells were infected with AdAFPtk. These findings suggest that the AFP promoter/enhancer sequence can provide the tumor-specific activity for the therapeutic gene expression, and that the AdAFPtk vector induces the selective growth inhibition by GCV in the adenovirus-infected human
hepatoma
cells in vitro. Recombinant adenovirus transfer of the HSVtk gene under the control of tumor-specific promoter followed by GCV may have promise as a targeted in situ treatment for solid neoplasms.
...
PMID:Gene therapy for alpha-fetoprotein-producing human hepatoma cells by adenovirus-mediated transfer of the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene. 867 52
Many approaches exist for hepatic gene delivery, including viral vectors and non-viral vectors. In this study, we tested a panel of liposomes to transfer pAGO, a plasmid containing one copy of
herpes simplex
virus (HSVtk) gene, and pYED11, a plasmid containing two copies of the HSVtk gene, into a murine
hepatocarcinoma
cell line (Hepa 1-6) and a human
hepatocarcinoma
cell line (Hep-G2). The efficiency of gene delivery and expression was characterized by beta-galactosidase staining, flow cytometric analysis and quantitative lacZ activity. Different combinations of liposomes and DNA and the ratio of the concentration of liposome to DNA were tested. The efficient transfer was shown with DOTAP followed by transfectam and lipofectamine. Under these conditions, we tested the cytotoxicity of ganciclovir (GCV) exposure on Hepa 1-6 and Hep-G2 transfected separately with liposome-pAGO and liposome-pYED11 complexes. This study demonstrates the in vitro efficacy of each liposome tested to transduce the HSVtk gene into
hepatocarcinoma
cell lines. The transfer of two copies of the HSVtk gene rendered cells 1.5 times more sensitive to GCV than cells transduced by pAGO as compared to controls. This was achieved most efficiently by the DOTAP-pYED11 complex. Thus, pYED11 may be considered as an alternative to pAGO as a gene transfer vector.
...
PMID:Gene transfer in hepatocarcinoma cell lines: in vitro optimization of a virus-free system. 878 97
The use of viral thymidine kinase (TK) gene coupled with the administration of ganciclovir to render cancer cell death has been studied extensively. Many of these experiments utilized retrovirus to transfer the TK gene under the control of a nonspecific promoter. Because nonspecific expression of the viral TK gene may cause death of proliferating cells, other than cancer cells, we explored the use of a liver-specific promoter and a tumor-specific AFP enhancer to achieve regulated viral TK gene expression for treatment of
hepatocellular carcinoma
. We also used the adeno-associated virus (AAV) as vector for the delivery of the TK gene because this virus is not associated with any pathological consequences in humans. Because it can infect nondividing S-phase cells, AAV can transfer genes into noncycling tumor cells. A recombinant AAV virus was constructed to include the selectable marker neoR gene and the
herpes simplex
virus (HSV)-TK gene driven by the human AFP enhancer and the albumin promoter. The liver-predominant expression pattern of the TK gene was observed when this construct was tested in transgenic mice. When human
hepatocellular carcinoma
cell lines displaying different levels of AFP and albumin and nonhepatocyte tumor cell lines were infected with the recombinant AAV virus, ganciclovir treatment caused only AFP and albumin-positive
hepatocellular carcinoma
cells death, but not nonhepatocyte tumor cells or AFP and albumin-negative hepatic tumor cells. Moreover, the dose required to kill the cancer cells was inversely proportional to the level of AFP expression in the cells.
...
PMID:Selective killing of AFP-positive hepatocellular carcinoma cells by adeno-associated virus transfer of the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene. 880 Jul 40
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