| Literature DB >> 11127584 |
H Fechner1, X Wang, H Wang, A Jansen, M Pauschinger, H Scherübl, J M Bergelson, H P Schultheiss, W Poller.
Abstract
Gene therapy of cancer requires high-level expression of therapeutic transgenes in the target cells. Poor gene transfer is an important limitation to adenovector-mediated cancer gene therapy. We investigated two fundamentally different approaches to improve transgene expression in poorly permissive cancer cells. First, overexpression of the adenovirus attachment receptor CAR to facilitate receptor-mediated adenovector (AdV) uptake into the target cells; second, co-infection of this vector together with traces of replication competent adenovirus (RCA) accidentally arising by back-recombination during large-scale vector preparation. Among eight gastrointestinal cancer cell lines, the colorectal cancer lines showed particularly poor vector-mediated transgene expression (down to 67-fold lower than in HeLa cells). Expression of the adenovirus receptors CAR, alpha(v)beta5- and alpha(v)beta3-integrin were highly variable between cell lines. AdV uptake was significantly associated with CAR levels on the cell surface, but not with those of the integrins. AdV-mediated CAR overexpression increased CAR density on the surface of all investigated tumor cells and led to enhancement of transgene expression by 1.8- to 6.7-fold. The other principle to enhance transgene expression was 'trans-complementation' of the therapeutic vector, ie induction of its replication within the target cells. Traces of RCA in a vector preparation, as well as purified RCA were found to provide sufficient E1-region transcripts to induce replication of the therapeutic vector genome. The number of adenovector-based transgene expression cassettes was greatly amplified by this principle, notably without any influence on the rate of vector entry. Co-infection of four colorectal cancer cell lines with marker vector plus RCA (at around 240:1 particle ratio) resulted in far stronger enhancement of transgene expression (up to 46-fold) as compared with CAR overexpression, even in cancers almost refractory to standard adenovector-mediated gene transfer. Whereas RCAs need to be strictly avoided in gene therapy of non-malignant diseases for safety reasons, the magnitude of helper virus-induced therapeutic transgene expression could possibly warrant application of this principle to overcome the resistance of highly malignant cancers against gene therapy.Entities:
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Year: 2000 PMID: 11127584 DOI: 10.1038/sj.gt.3301321
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gene Ther ISSN: 0969-7128 Impact factor: 5.250