Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
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Query: UNIPROT:P39060 (
endostatin
)
2,284
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Despite multimodality treatment for thyroid cancer, including surgical resection, radioiodine therapy, thyrotropin (TSH)-suppressive thyroxine treatment, and chemotherapy/radiotherapy, survival rates have not improved over the last decades. Therefore, development and evaluation of novel treatment strategies, including gene therapy, are urgently needed. A variety of gene therapy approaches have been evaluated for the treatment of follicular cell-derived and medullary thyroid cancer, including corrective gene therapy (p53 restoration, expression of a dominant negative RET mutant), cytoreductive gene therapy (suicide gene/prodrug strategy herpes simplex virus-
thymidine kinase
[HSV-tk]/ganciclovir, antiangiogenic therapy with
endostatin
) and immunomodulatory gene therapy (expression of interleukin (IL)-2 and IL-12). Furthermore, cloning of the sodium iodide symporter (NIS) gene has paved the way for the development of a novel cytoreductive gene therapy strategy based on NIS gene transfer followed by the application of radioiodine therapy ((131)I). NIS gene delivery into medullary and follicular cell-derived thyroid cancer cells has been shown to be capable of establishing or restoring radioiodine accumulation and might therefore represent an effective therapy for medullary and dedifferentiated thyroid tumors that lack iodide accumulating activity. The data summarized in this review article clearly demonstrate that the currently available strategies represent potentially curative novel therapeutic approaches for future gene therapy of thyroid cancer. The combination of different therapeutic genes has been demonstrated to be very useful to enhance therapeutic efficacy and seems to have a promising role at least as part of a multimodality approach for advanced thyroid cancer.
...
PMID:Gene therapy for thyroid cancer: current status and future prospects. 1524 69
There is growing evidence that combinations of antiangiogenic proteins with other antineoplastic treatments such as chemo- or radiotherapy and suicide genes-mediated tumor cytotoxicity lead to synergistic effects. In the present work, we tested the activity of two non-replicative herpes simplex virus (HSV)-1-based vectors, encoding human
endostatin
::angiostatin or
endostatin
::kringle5 fusion proteins in combination with HSV-1
thymidine kinase
(TK) molecule, on endothelial cells (ECs) and Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC) cells. We observed a significant reduction of the in vitro growth, migration and tube formation by primary ECs upon direct infection with the two recombinant vectors or cultivation with conditioned media obtained from the vector-infected LLC cells. Moreover, direct cytotoxic effect of HSV-1 TK on both LLC and ECs was demonstrated. We then tested the vectors in vivo in two experimental settings, that is, LLC tumor growth or establishment, in C57BL/6 mice. The treatment of pre-established subcutaneous tumors with the recombinant vectors with ganciclovir (GCV) induced a significant reduction of tumor growth rate, while the in vitro infection of LLC cells with the antiangiogenic vectors before their implantation in mice flanks, either in presence or absence of GCV, completely abolished the tumor establishment.
...
PMID:Antitumor effects of non-replicative herpes simplex vectors expressing antiangiogenic proteins and thymidine kinase on Lewis lung carcinoma establishment and growth. 1755 10