Literature DB >> 16288496

Comparative analysis of antitumor activity of CD40L, RANKL, and 4-1BBL in vivo following intratumoral administration of viral vectors or transduced dendritic cells.

Zoya R Yurkovetsky1, Galina V Shurin, Denise A Barry, Andre C Schuh, Michael R Shurin, Paul D Robbins.   

Abstract

The tumor necrosis factor (TNF) family comprises a group of ligands that regulate cell proliferation, differentiation, activation, maturation and apoptosis through interaction with the corresponding TNF receptor family members. In this study, we have evaluated whether adenovirus-mediated intratumoral gene transfer of CD40L, RANKL, or 4-1BBL elicits an immune response to established murine MC38 and TS/A tumors. Intratumoral administration of the recombinant adenoviral vectors expressing CD40L, RANKL or 4-1BBL 7 days post-tumor cell inoculation resulted in significant inhibition of MC38 tumor growth for all three ligands when compared with control groups treated with either saline or control adenovirus. However, intratumoral injection of Ad-4-1BBL or Ad-CD40L resulted in a significantly stronger inhibition of TS/A tumor progression than did Ad-RANKL treatment. We also demonstrated that intratumoral administration of dendritic cells (DC) transduced with adenoviral vectors encoding the TNF-related ligands resulted in a significant inhibition of MC38 tumor growth as compared with control groups treated with Ad-LacZ-transduced DC or saline-treated DC. In addition, DC overexpressing CD40L secreted considerably more IL-12 and expressed higher levels of the co-stimulatory molecules, CD80, CD86 and CD40, than did DC overexpressing LacZ, 4-1BBL or RANKL. We have also demonstrated that DC/CD40L, DC/4-1BBL, and DC/RANKL survived significantly longer than control DC or DC infected with the LacZ vector. Taken together, these results demonstrate that adenoviral gene transfer of CD40L, RANKL or 4-1BBL elicit a significant antitumor effect in two different tumor models, with CD40L gene transfer inducing the strongest antitumor effect. Copyright 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16288496     DOI: 10.1002/jgm.834

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Gene Med        ISSN: 1099-498X            Impact factor:   4.565


  7 in total

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