Literature DB >> 18218323

Oncogenicity of DNA in vivo: tumor induction with expression plasmids for activated H-ras and c-myc.

Li Sheng1, Fang Cai, Yong Zhu, Achintya Pal, Meropi Athanasiou, Brian Orrison, Donald G Blair, Stephen H Hughes, John M Coffin, Andrew M Lewis, Keith Peden.   

Abstract

All vaccines and other biological products contain contaminating residual DNA derived from the production cell substrate. Whether this residual cell-substrate DNA can induce tumors in vaccine recipients and thus represent a risk factor has been debated for over 50 years without resolution. As a first step in resolving this issue, we have generated expression plasmids for the activated human H-ras oncogene and for the murine c-myc proto-oncogene. Their oncogenic activity was confirmed in vitro using the focus-formation transformation assay. Two strains of adult and newborn immune-competent mice were inoculated with different amounts of either plasmid alone or with a combination of the H-ras and c-myc plasmids. Tumors developed only in mice inoculated with both plasmids and only at the highest amount of DNA (12.5 microg of each plasmid). The NIH Swiss mouse was more sensitive than the C57BL/6 mouse, and newborn animals were more sensitive than adults. Cell lines were established from the tumors. PCR and Southern hybridization analyses demonstrated that both inoculated oncogenes were present in all of the tumor-derived cell lines and that the cells in the tumors were clonal. Western analysis demonstrated that both oncoproteins were expressed in these cell lines. These results demonstrate that cellular oncogenes can induce tumors following subcutaneous inoculation. Such information provides a possible way of evaluating and estimating the theoretical oncogenic risk posed by residual cell-substrate DNA in vaccines.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18218323     DOI: 10.1016/j.biologicals.2007.11.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biologicals        ISSN: 1045-1056            Impact factor:   1.856


  6 in total

1.  Tumors induced in mice by direct inoculation of plasmid DNA expressing both activated H-ras and c-myc.

Authors:  Li Sheng-Fowler; Fang Cai; Haiqing Fu; Yong Zhu; Brian Orrison; Gideon Foseh; Don G Blair; Stephen H Hughes; John M Coffin; Andrew M Lewis; Keith Peden
Journal:  Int J Biol Sci       Date:  2010-03-29       Impact factor: 6.580

Review 2.  Product-Related Impurities in Clinical-Grade Recombinant AAV Vectors: Characterization and Risk Assessment.

Authors:  J Fraser Wright
Journal:  Biomedicines       Date:  2014-03-03

3.  Validation of the safety of MDCK cells as a substrate for the production of a cell-derived influenza vaccine.

Authors:  David Onions; William Egan; Ruth Jarrett; Deborah Novicki; Jens-Peter Gregersen
Journal:  Biologicals       Date:  2010-09       Impact factor: 1.856

4.  A mouse strain defective in both T cells and NK cells has enhanced sensitivity to tumor induction by plasmid DNA expressing both activated H-Ras and c-Myc.

Authors:  Li Sheng-Fowler; Wei Tu; Haiqing Fu; Haruhiko Murata; Lynda Lanning; Gideon Foseh; Juliete Macauley; Donald Blair; Stephen H Hughes; John M Coffin; Andrew M Lewis; Keith Peden
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-10-10       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Effects of pH, conductivity, host cell protein, and DNA size distribution on DNA clearance in anion exchange chromatography media.

Authors:  Melani C Stone; Jon Borman; Gisela Ferreira; P David Robbins
Journal:  Biotechnol Prog       Date:  2017-09-30

6.  Development and Validation of Quantitative Real-Time PCR for the Detection of Residual CHO Host Cell DNA and Optimization of Sample Pretreatment Method in Biopharmaceutical Products.

Authors:  Weifeng Zheng; Lin Jiang; Qing Lei; Jun Yang; Xuefeng Gao; Wanru Wang; Yanli Zhang; Tao Kong; Qiaoli Chen; Gang Li
Journal:  Biol Proced Online       Date:  2019-09-01       Impact factor: 3.244

  6 in total

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