Literature DB >> 24860662

Stem cells' guided gene therapy of cancer: New frontier in personalized and targeted therapy.

Maria Mavroudi1, Paul Zarogoulidis1, Konstantinos Porpodis1, Ioannis Kioumis1, Sofia Lampaki1, Lonny Yarmus2, Raf Malecki3, Konstantinos Zarogoulidis2, Marek Malecki4.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Diagnosis and therapy of cancer remain to be the greatest challenges for all physicians working in clinical oncology and molecular medicine. The statistics speak for themselves with the grim reports of 1,638,910 men and women diagnosed with cancer and nearly 577,190 patients passed away due to cancer in the USA in 2012. For practicing clinicians, who treat patients suffering from advanced cancers with contemporary systemic therapies, the main challenge is to attain therapeutic efficacy, while minimizing side effects. Unfortunately, all contemporary systemic therapies cause side effects. In treated patients, these side effects may range from nausea to damaged tissues. In cancer survivors, the iatrogenic outcomes of systemic therapies may include genomic mutations and their consequences. Therefore, there is an urgent need for personalized and targeted therapies. Recently, we reviewed the current status of suicide gene therapy for cancer. Herein, we discuss the novel strategy: genetically engineered stem cells' guided gene therapy. REVIEW OF THERAPEUTIC STRATEGIES IN PRECLINICAL AND CLINICAL TRIALS: Stem cells have the unique potential for self renewal and differentiation. This potential is the primary reason for introducing them into medicine to regenerate injured or degenerated organs, as well as to rejuvenate aging tissues. Recent advances in genetic engineering and stem cell research have created the foundations for genetic engineering of stem cells as the vectors for delivery of therapeutic transgenes. Specifically in oncology, the stem cells are genetically engineered to deliver the cell suicide inducing genes selectively to the cancer cells only. Expression of the transgenes kills the cancer cells, while leaving healthy cells unaffected. Herein, we present various strategies to bioengineer suicide inducing genes and stem cell vectors. Moreover, we review results of the main preclinical studies and clinical trials. However, the main risk for therapeutic use of stem cells is their cancerous transformation. Therefore, we discuss various strategies to safeguard stem cell guided gene therapy against iatrogenic cancerogenesis. PERSPECTIVES: Defining cancer biomarkers to facilitate early diagnosis, elucidating cancer genomics and proteomics with modern tools of next generation sequencing, and analyzing patients' gene expression profiles provide essential data to elucidate molecular dynamics of cancer and to consider them for crafting pharmacogenomics-based personalized therapies. Streamlining of these data into genetic engineering of stem cells facilitates their use as the vectors delivering therapeutic genes into specific cancer cells. In this realm, stem cells guided gene therapy becomes a promising new frontier in personalized and targeted therapy of cancer.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cancer; genomic medicine; personalized therapy; pharmacogenomics; stem cell guided delivery of therapeutics; stem cells; suicide gene therapy; targeted therapy

Year:  2014        PMID: 24860662      PMCID: PMC4031908          DOI: 10.14312/2052-4994.2014-4

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cancer Res Ther (Manch)        ISSN: 2052-4994


  125 in total

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10.  Human pancreatic cancer contains a side population expressing cancer stem cell-associated and prognostic genes.

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3.  DDMC-p53 gene therapy with or without cisplatin and microwave ablation.

Authors:  Wolfgang Hohenforst-Schmidt; Paul Zarogoulidis; Joshua Stopek; Thomas Vogl; Frank Hübner; J Francis Turner; Robert Browning; Konstantinos Zarogoulidis; Antonis Drevelegas; Konstantinos Drevelegas; Kaid Darwiche; Lutz Freitag; Harald Rittger
Journal:  Onco Targets Ther       Date:  2015-05-20       Impact factor: 4.147

4.  A gene therapy induced emphysema model and the protective role of stem cells.

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5.  Suicide genes: monitoring cells in patients with a safety switch.

Authors:  Linda G Eissenberg; Michael Rettig; Farrokh Dehdashti; David Piwnica-Worms; John F DiPersio
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6.  'Above all, do no harm': safeguarding pluripotent stem cell therapy against iatrogenic tumorigenesis.

Authors:  Marek Malecki
Journal:  Stem Cell Res Ther       Date:  2014-06-03       Impact factor: 6.832

  6 in total

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