Literature DB >> 25621996

In vivo molecular imaging and radionuclide (131I) therapy of human nasopharyngeal carcinoma cells transfected with a lentivirus expressing sodium iodide symporter.

Shuo Shi1, Min Zhang1, Rui Guo1, Ying Miao1, Jiajia Hu1, Yun Xi1, Biao Li1.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Despite recent improvements in the survival rates for nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC), novel treatment strategies are required to improve distant metastasis-free survival. The sodium iodine symporter (NIS) gene has been applied for in vivo imaging and cancer therapy. In this study, we examined the potential of NIS gene therapy as a therapeutic approach in NPC by performing non-invasive imaging using 125I and 131I therapy in vivo.
METHODS: We constructed a lentiviral vector expressing NIS and enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP) under the control of the human elongation factor-1α (EF1α) promoter, and stably transfected the vector into CNE-2Z NPC cells to create CNE-2Z-NIS cells. CNE-2Z and CNE-2Z-NIS tumor xenografts were established in nude mice; 125I uptake, accumulation and efflux were measured using micro-SPECT/CT imaging; the therapeutic effects of treatment with 131I were assessed over 25 days by measuring tumor volume and immunohistochemical staining of the excised tumors.
RESULTS: qPCR, immunofluorescence and Western blotting confirmed that CNE-2Z-NIS cells expressed high levels of NIS mRNA and protein. CNE-2Z-NIS cells and xenografts took up and accumulated significantly more 125I than CNE-2Z cells and xenografts. In vitro, 131I significantly reduced the clonogenic survival of CNE-2Z-NIS cells. In vivo, 131I effectively inhibited the growth of CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts. At the end of 131I therapy, CNE-2Z-NIS xenograft tumor cells expressed higher levels of NIS and caspase-3 and lower levels of Ki-67.
CONCLUSION: Lentiviruses effectively delivered and mediated long-lasting expression of NIS in CNE-2Z cells which enabled uptake and accumulation of radioisotopes and provided a significant therapeutic effect in an in vivo model of NPC. NIS-mediated radioiodine treatment merits further investigation as a potentially effective, low toxicity therapeutic strategy for NPC.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25621996      PMCID: PMC4306548          DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0116531

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


Introduction

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) represents only a small proportion of head and neck cancers worldwide, but has a high rate of incidence in southern China, Southeast Asia, northern Africa and Alaska [1]. Radiotherapy is the mainstream treatment for primary NPC. Due to improved radiotherapy techniques and chemotherapy strategies, the 5-year survival rate for NPC has increased from 50% in the 1980s to 80% at present [2]. However, 15%–58% of patients still experience recurrent disease, most of whom recur within 3 years of initial treatment [3]. Therefore, novel efficient therapies need to be explored to improve the management of recurrent, residual and metastatic NPC [4]. Sodium iodide symporter (NIS) is an intrinsic membrane glycoprotein responsible for iodide transport. NIS is expressed in thyroid follicular cells and others cells containing a lactoperoxidase system [5, 6]. It has been targeted as a safe and effective approach for the imaging and treatment of thyroid disease [7]. A number of other studies have successfully introduced ectopic expression of NIS for imaging and therapy in non-thyroidal carcinoma [8, 9]. The field of gene therapy has made considerable advances in the last decade due to the development of new vector systems, including lentiviral vectors, and an increasing repertoire of therapeutic genes [10]. Thus, NIS-based gene therapy may potentially have therapeutic value in other intractable malignancies. In the current study, we employed a lentiviral vector to express a functional NIS gene in NPC cells. The potential of NIS as an imaging reporter gene for the uptake and accumulation of 125I, and target gene for 131I therapy were investigated in vitro and in vivo using a xenograft model of NPC.

Materials and Methods

Virus production and cell culture

Lv-EF1α-OCT4-IRES-EGFP was kindly provided by the Institute of Molecular Biology, Chinese Academy of Sciences; pcDNA3.1-NIS was obtained from our own library [11]. The NIS gene was amplified from pcDNA3.1-NIS by PCR using the primers: forward (5’-GCGCGGATCCCGGGTATCGATGGAGGCCGTG-3’) and reverse (5’-CGCGTCTAGATCAGAGGTTTGTAGGTAGTGAGC-3’), digested with XbaI and BamHI, and cloned into the XbaI and BamHI sites of Lv-EF1α-OCT4-IRES-EGFP generating a functional vector featuring NIS under the control of the human elongation factor-1α (EF1α) promoter (the OCT transgene of Lv-EF1α-OCT4-IRES-EGFP was replaced with NIS). HEK293T cell line (Cell Bank of the Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai, China) was cultured in RPMI-1640 medium supplemented with 10% FBS(Fetal Bovine Serum) and 1% penicillin/streptomycin. Virus particles were generated by cotransfection of HEK293T cells with Lv-EF1α-NIS-IRES-EGFP and the three packaging plasmids pRsv-REV, pMDIg-pRRE and pMD2G(Biovector Science Lab, Beijing, China). The virus particles were harvested by collecting the cell culture medium at 48 h post-transfection; the supernatants were filtered through 0.45 µm filters, centrifuged at 10,000 g for 15 min and the resulting pellet was resuspended in 100 μl culture medium.

CNE-2Z cell culture

The human NPC cell line CNE-2Z (Cell Bank of the Chinese Academy of Science, Shanghai, China) was cultured in RPMI-1640 medium supplemented with 10% FBS (Fetal Bovine Serum) and 1% penicillin/streptomycin. CNE-2Z cells were infected overnight with Lv-EF1α-NIS-IRES-EGFP at a multiplicity of infection (MOI) of 20. To obtain CNE-2Z cells stably transfected with Lv-EF1α-NIS-IRES-EGFP (CNE-2Z-NIS cells), the EGFP-positive cells were sorted using a FACScan (Becton Dickinson, CA, USA) following the standard procedure with a standard excitation wavelength of 488 nm. The sorted cells were cultured for about 2 weeks, sorted again, the process repeated until the EGFP-positive cells is nearly 100% after cultured 2 weeks the last time sorted.

qPCR, immunofluorescence and Western blotting

CNE-2Z and CNE-2Z-NIS cells were lysed using TRIzol (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA, USA), total RNA was extracted. cDNA was synthesized using the PrimeScript First Strand cDNA Synthesis kit (Takara Bio Inc., Dalian, China). Real Time PCR was performed using SYBR Premix Ex Taq II (Takara Bio Inc.) according to the manufacturer’s instructions. The NIS gene was amplified with forward (5’-GTACATTG TAGCCACGATGCTGTA-3’) and reverse primers (5’-CCGTGTAGAAGGTGCAGATAATTC-3’), 95°C for 30 s followed by 40 cycles of 5 s at 95°C and 30 s at 60°C. GAPDH was co-amplified using the primers: forward (5’-GTCAAGCTCATTTCCTGGTATGAC-3’) and reverse (5’- CTCTCTCTTCCTCTTGTGCTCTTG -3’). To correct for differences in both quality and quantity between samples, according to the manufacture’s protocol, NIS expression level was normalized to that of the GAPDH endogenous reference as given by: F value = 2-ΔΔCt [12]. CNE-2Z cells and CNE-2Z-NIS cells were incubated in lysis buffer (99% SDS lysis buffer, 1% PMSF) on ice, centrifuged at 10,000 ×g and the protein concentrations of the supernatants were measured using the BCA Protein Assay Kit (Beyotime Inst Biotech, Shanghai, China). Equal quantities of protein were subjected to Western blotting using polyclonal goat anti-NIS antibody (Santa Cruz Biotechnology, CA, USA; 1:500), GAPDH (Beyotime Inst Biotech, Shanghai, China; 1:1000), anti-goat IgG-HRP (MultiSciences Biotech Co. Shanghai, China; 1:5,000). The same polyclonal NIS antibody (1:100) was used for immunofluorescence in combination with DyLight594 rabbit anti-goat IgG (MultiSciences Biotech Co., Shanghai, China; 1:300) and images were observed with a fluorescence microscope (Olympus, Tokyo, Japan)

Cell viability assay

CNE-2Z and CNE-2Z-NIS cells were plated into 96-well plates (2 × 103 cells/well), incubated for 12, 24, 36,48 or 72 h, the blank group contained only medium without cells. 10 μl CCK-8 reagent (Beyotime Inst. Biotech, Shanghai, China) was added to the wells and the cells were incubated for 1 h. Absorbance values were measured using a Multiskan MK3 microplate reader (Thermo Scientific, Hudson, USA) at 450 nm. The absorbance of cells = (Atest-Ablank), Atest represents absorbance of each experimental group, and Ablank represents absorbance of each blank group. The mean ± standard deviation (SD) values of quadruplicate replicates from at least three independent experiments are presented.

125I uptake and efflux studies

125I uptake and efflux were determined in triplicate as previously described [13]. The day before, CNE-2Z and CNE-2Z-NIS cells were plated (2 × 105 cells/well) in 24-well plates. 24 hours later, 500 μl of Hank’s balanced salt solution (HBSS) containing 3.7 kBq 125I and 10 μmol/L sodium iodide (NaI) was added. CNE-2Z-NIS cells in the inhibition group were treated with 50 μM sodium perchlorate (NaClO4). The cells were incubated at 37°C for 5–120 min, washed twice with ice-cold HBSS and lysed using 0.5 mol/L NaOH. The radioactivity (counts per minute, cpm) of the cell lysates was measured using an automatic γ counter (Shanghai Rihuan Company, Shanghai, China). For the efflux studies, CNE-2Z-NIS cells were incubated with 3.7 kBq Na125I and 10 μM NaI in 500 μl of HBSS at 37°C for 60 min, washed twice with HBSS, and incubated in 500 μl of HBSS containing 10 μM NaI (without radioactive Na125I). After the same treatment above, CNE-2Z-NIS cells in the inhibition group were treated with 50 μM sodium perchlorate (NaClO4). Every 5 min (5–40 min), the buffer was replaced and the radioactivity of the solutions was determined. After removal of the last sample (at 40 min), the cells were lysed using 0.5 mol/L NaOH. Total radioactivity at the initiation of the efflux study was calculated by adding final cell radioactivity to total media radioactivity. Na125I remaining activity at different time point = (total radioactivity-the sum of radioactivity of the solution at and before the time point) / total radioactivity.

In vitro clonogenic assay

CNE-2Z and CNE-2Z-NIS cells were plated into 10 cm culture dishes (6 × 106 cells/dish) and 4.6 MBq 131I in HBSS was added. After 8 h, the cells were washed three times with HBSS, trypsinized and 1,000 cells were plated into each well of 6-well culture plates. On day 7, the cells were stained with 1 ml of Crystal Violet Staining Solution (Beyotime Inst Biotech) for 10 min and colonies containing more than 50 cells were counted; results are expressed as the percentage of surviving cells. The survival rate was expressed as the percentage of colonies to that of the blank group without 131I incubation. Data are represented as means ± standard deviation (SD).

Establishment of xenograft tumors in nude mice

24 male Balb/c–nude mice (4 weeks–old; Shanghai Slaccas Experiment Animal Corporation, Shanghai Institute for Biological Science, China) were subcutaneously injected with 5 × 106 CNE-2Z or CNE-2Z-NIS cells in 150 μl of PBS in each flank. The mice were euthanized by cervical vertebra dislocation at the end of the experiments. The animal studies were approved by the local Ethics Committee (Shanghai Jiao Tong University, School of Medicine) and performed according to ethical principles of animal experimentation.

Micro-SPECT/CT imaging

The CNE and CNE-2Z-NIS tumor-bearing mice (5 weeks–old) were i.v. injected with 10.5 MBq of 125I, anesthesia was induced and maintained by isoflurane inhalation, and the mice were placed in a spread-prone position and scanned using a small-animal micro-SPECT scanner (Bioscan, Washington, USA) at 10, 30, 60 min, 2, 4, 8, 24 and 32 h after injection of 125I. CT images were acquired (CTDI = 6.1 cGy) before whole-body NanoSPECT images (10 s/frame for systematic scans) were obtained, without moving the mice. The images were processed and reconstructed using Nuclear v1.02 software (Bioscan), HiSPECT 1.4.2 software (Bioscan) for image acquisition and InVivoScope 1.44 software (Bioscan) for image analysis. Regions of interest (ROIs) were drawn around the visible organs and the radioactivity per volume unit (Conc) in the ROIs was measured using InVivoScope 1.44 software (Bioscan).

In vivo 131I therapy

10 days prior to in vivo therapy, L-thyroxine (5 mg/L; L-T4; Merck KGaA, Darmstadt, Germany) was added to the drinking water to maximize radioiodine uptake by the tumors and minimize iodide uptake by the thyroid gland. Water consumption has been monitored carefully in each animal so that each nude mouse can drink almost the same water each day. Treatment was initiated when the tumors reached 3–5 mm in diameter (~70mm3). Two groups of CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z tumor-bearing mice were i.v. injected with 37 MBq of 131I on day 1 (6 mice/group), other two groups of CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z tumor-bearing mice were i.v. injected with 150μl PBS on day 1 (6 mice/group). Tumor size was measured on day 7 after 131I injection and every 3 days thereafter up to day 25 using calipers; tumor volume was calculated using: volume (mm3) = (L × W2)/ 2 [14].

Histology and immunohistochemistry

25 days after administration of 131I, the animals were sacrificed by cervical vertebra dislocation and the tumors were, cryosectioned (5 μm) and subjected to immunohistochemical analysis using rabbit anti-human NIS antibody (1:50; Proteintech, CHI, USA), rabbit anti-human caspase-3 antibody (1:30; Epitomics, California, USA) and rabbit anti-human Ki67 antibody (1:200; Thermo Scientific, Fremont, USA). Immunohistochemical analysis was analyzed through image pro plus software (Media CY Company). For every section, the integral optical density (IOD) of every visual field was calculated. Data are represented as means ± standard deviation (SD).

Statistical analysis

Data was analyzed using GaphPad Prism software (version 5.0; GraphPad Software, Inc., San Diego, USA); mean ±SD values are presented. Statistical analyses were performed using two-tailed Student’s t-tests for group differences and analysis of variance (ANOVA) for group differences separately. For all analyses, p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant.

Results

Stable expression of NIS in CNE-2Z-NIS cells

The Lv-EF1α-NIS-IRES-EGFP vector was designed to transcribe NIS and EGFP using an internal ribosomal entry site (IRES). NIS was cloned between the EF1α promoter and the IRES (Fig. 1A). Immunofluorescent staining, qPCR and Western blotting confirmed that CNE-2Z cells transfected with Lv-EF1α-NIS-IRES-EGFP (hereafter referred to as CNE-2Z-NIS cells) expressed high levels of NIS mRNA and protein (~90 kDa). (Fig. 1B, C, D).
Figure 1

Construction and expression of a two-gene vector containing NIS and EGFP.

(A) Schematic representation of the functional NIS gene and EGFP (green fluorescent protein reporter) gene in Lv-EF1α-NIS-IRES-EGFP. (B) Immunofluorescence showing that NIS and EGFP were strongly expressed in the CNE-2Z-NIS cells. (a: green color shows EGFP expression; b: red color shows NIS expression; c: a merged picture) (magnification, 400×). (C) qPCR analysis of NIS expression in CNE-2Z and CNE-2Z-NIS cells. NIS mRNA expression normalized to the GAPDH endogenous reference was detected by qRT-PCR. Results are expressed as means ± SD of three independent experiments. (D) Western blot analysis of NIS expression in CNE-2Z and CNE-2Z-NIS cells. NIS protein (~90 kDa) expression in CNE-2Z-NIS but not in CNE-2Z cells was analyzed by Western blot. GAPDH (~36 kDa) was used as an internal control (a: CNE-2Z-NIS; b: CNE-2Z). All experiments were performed in triplicate.

Construction and expression of a two-gene vector containing NIS and EGFP.

(A) Schematic representation of the functional NIS gene and EGFP (green fluorescent protein reporter) gene in Lv-EF1α-NIS-IRES-EGFP. (B) Immunofluorescence showing that NIS and EGFP were strongly expressed in the CNE-2Z-NIS cells. (a: green color shows EGFP expression; b: red color shows NIS expression; c: a merged picture) (magnification, 400×). (C) qPCR analysis of NIS expression in CNE-2Z and CNE-2Z-NIS cells. NIS mRNA expression normalized to the GAPDH endogenous reference was detected by qRT-PCR. Results are expressed as means ± SD of three independent experiments. (D) Western blot analysis of NIS expression in CNE-2Z and CNE-2Z-NIS cells. NIS protein (~90 kDa) expression in CNE-2Z-NIS but not in CNE-2Z cells was analyzed by Western blot. GAPDH (~36 kDa) was used as an internal control (a: CNE-2Z-NIS; b: CNE-2Z). All experiments were performed in triplicate.

CCK-8 assay

There was no significant difference in cell viability between CNE-2Z and CNE-2Z-NIS cells (p> 0.05) (Fig. 2).
Figure 2

Effect of Lv-EF1α-NIS-IRES-EGFP on the proliferation of CNE-2Z cells.

CNE-2Z cells and CNE-2Z-NIS cells were subjected to the CCK-8 assay at 12, 24, 36, 48 and 72 h. Results are means ± SD of three independent experiments.

Effect of Lv-EF1α-NIS-IRES-EGFP on the proliferation of CNE-2Z cells.

CNE-2Z cells and CNE-2Z-NIS cells were subjected to the CCK-8 assay at 12, 24, 36, 48 and 72 h. Results are means ± SD of three independent experiments.

Uptake and efflux of 125I by NPC cells expressing NIS in vitro

The functional activity of NIS protein was clearly shown by its cellular iodide uptake. 125I uptake by CNE-2Z-NIS cells varied depending on the incubation time. After 125I added in CNE-2Z-NIS cells, 125I was immediately absorbed by NIS protein, and peaked at approximately 3,500 cpm at 5 min; this was 8-fold higher than the level of 125I uptake by CNE-2Z cells at the same time point. There was no functional iodide uptake observed in the CNE-2Z cells. 125I uptake by CNE-2Z-NIS cells could be completely blocked by sodium perchlorate (Fig. 3A). Because the absorbed iodide can’t be synthesized as the organic iodide polymer, neither can it be stored in CNE-2Z-NIS cells like in thyroid cells, it was rapidly effluxed from CNE-2Z-NIS cells and CNE-2Z-NIS cells treated with 50 μM sodium perchlorate (NaClO4), with a same t1/2 of approximately 20 min (Fig. 3B).
Figure 3

125 I uptake and efflux assays.

(A) CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z cells were incubated with Na125I at 37°C for 5–120 min. In the inhibition group, CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z cells were incubated with 125I + 50 μM sodium perchlorate. Results are expressed as means ± SD of three independent experiments. (B) Iodine was rapidly effluxed from CNE-2Z-NIS cells and CNE-2Z-NIS cells treated with 50 μM sodium perchlorate, with a t 1/2 of approximately 20 min.

125 I uptake and efflux assays.

(A) CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z cells were incubated with Na125I at 37°C for 5–120 min. In the inhibition group, CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z cells were incubated with 125I + 50 μM sodium perchlorate. Results are expressed as means ± SD of three independent experiments. (B) Iodine was rapidly effluxed from CNE-2Z-NIS cells and CNE-2Z-NIS cells treated with 50 μM sodium perchlorate, with a t 1/2 of approximately 20 min.

In vivo imaging of the biodistribution of 125I in mice bearing NPC xenografts expressing NIS

Significant radioactive uptake was observed by the CNE-2Z-NIS tumors from 30 min to 8 h, peaking within 4 h; however, 125I uptake was not detectable in CNE-2Z tumors. The radioactivity of CNE-2Z-NIS tumors slightly decreased after 8 h; however, radioactivity could still be detected 32 h after injection of 125I. (Fig. 4).
Figure 4

Dynamic 125I SPECT/CT imaging in vivo.

Micro-SPECT/CT imaging of mice bearing CNE-2Z tumors (yellow arrow) and CNE-2Z-NIS tumors (red arrow) after injection of 125I (10.5 MBq) for 10min–32h.

Dynamic 125I SPECT/CT imaging in vivo.

Micro-SPECT/CT imaging of mice bearing CNE-2Z tumors (yellow arrow) and CNE-2Z-NIS tumors (red arrow) after injection of 125I (10.5 MBq) for 10min–32h. ROIs were created by CT positioning during SPECT imaging to define the tissues described above and the Conc values were obtained at various time points. Accumulation of 125I increased gradually in CNE-2Z-NIS tumors and reached the highest Conc value at 4 h after injection of 125I; this was significantly (up to 75%) higher than the corresponding values for CNE-2Z tumors. And then decreased by 8 h and reached the lowest Conc value at 32 h. Significant radioiodine accumulation was also observed in tissues which express endogenous NIS, including the thyroid and stomach, and also in the urinary bladder and heart due to renal elimination and absorption of the radionuclide into the bloodstream. The Conc values of the lung, liver, muscle and the intestine remained low at all time points (Fig. 5).
Figure 5

Quantitative analysis of 125I uptake in vivo.

Conc values (μCi/mm3) of the xenograft tumors and organs after injection of 125I (same time points as in Fig. 4).

Quantitative analysis of 125I uptake in vivo.

Conc values (μCi/mm3) of the xenograft tumors and organs after injection of 125I (same time points as in Fig. 4).

131I reduces the survival of NPC cells expressing NIS in vitro

In vitro clonogenic assays were performed to determine the effect of 131I in CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z cells. 131I had a significant cytotoxic effect in CNE-2Z-NIS cells compared to CNE-2Z cells (p < 0.001) and control CNE-2Z-NIS cells treated with HBSS (p < 0.001) (Fig. 6).
Figure 6

Cytotoxic effect of 131I towards CNE-2Z-NIS cells in vitro.

CNE-2Z and CNE-2Z-NIS cells (6 × 106 cells/dish) were incubated with 4.6 MBq 131I in HBSS for 8 h. Subsequently, cells were washed with HBSS, trypsinized and 1,000 cells were plated into each well of 6-well culture plates for 7 days. The survival rate was expressed as the percentage of colonies to that of the blank group without 131I incubation. Data are presented as means ± SD.

Cytotoxic effect of 131I towards CNE-2Z-NIS cells in vitro.

CNE-2Z and CNE-2Z-NIS cells (6 × 106 cells/dish) were incubated with 4.6 MBq 131I in HBSS for 8 h. Subsequently, cells were washed with HBSS, trypsinized and 1,000 cells were plated into each well of 6-well culture plates for 7 days. The survival rate was expressed as the percentage of colonies to that of the blank group without 131I incubation. Data are presented as means ± SD.

Therapeutic effects of 131I in NPC xenograft tumors expressing NIS in vivo

Therapy with 131I was initiated when the tumors reached 3–5 mm in diameter (~70mm3). 131I significantly inhibited the growth of CNE-2Z-NIS tumors compared to CNE-2Z tumors treated with 131I, CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z tumors treated with PBS (P<0.001). There is no significant difference among the growth of CNE-2Z tumors treated with 131I, CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z tumors treated with PBS (P>0.05) (Fig. 7A). Therapy did not affect food intake or physical activity. During treatment, the weight of the CNE-2Z-NIS tumor-bearing mice treated with 131I increased at almost the same rate as the CNE-2Z tumor-bearing mice treated with 131I, CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z tumor-bearing mice treated with PBS (P>0.05) (Fig. 7B). Representative images of the indirect immunohistochemical staining of the tumor xenografts are shown in Fig. 8A. Immunohistochemical analysis shows that high expression of NIS protein was observed in the cells of the CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts with 131I or PBS treatment compared with the cells of the CNE-2Z xenografts with 131I or PBS treatment (p<0.001, Fig. 8B). Higher expression of Caspase3 protein was observed in the cells of CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts treated with 131I compared with the cells of the CNE-2Z xenografts treated with 131I, CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts treated with PBS and CNE-2Z xenografts treated with PBS (p<0.001, Fig. 8B), but lower expression of Ki67 protein in the cells of the CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts treated with 131I was observed compared with the other three groups (p<0.001, Fig. 8B).
Figure 7

Therapeutic effects of 131I on CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts.

(A) During the 25 day period after injection of 131I or PBS, the growth of CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z xenografts were measured at different time. Data are present as means ± SD. (B) Weight of the mice during the 25 day period after injection of 131I. Data are present as means ± SD.

Figure 8

Immunohistochemical staining.

(A) Expression of NIS, caspase-3 and Ki-67 in CNE-2Z and CNE-2Z-NIS xenograft tumors treated with 131I or PBS (magnification, 200×). (B) Immunohistochemical analysis of protein NIS, caspase3 and Ki67. High expression of NIS protein was observed in the cells of the CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts with 131I or PBS treatment compared with the cells of the CNE-2Z xenografts with 131I or PBS treatment (p<0.001). High expression of Caspase3 protein was observed in the cells of the CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts treated with 131I compared with the other three groups (p<0.001), but low expression of Ki67 protein in the cells of the CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts treated with 131I was observed compared with the other three groups (p<0.001). Data are present as means ± SD.

Therapeutic effects of 131I on CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts.

(A) During the 25 day period after injection of 131I or PBS, the growth of CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z xenografts were measured at different time. Data are present as means ± SD. (B) Weight of the mice during the 25 day period after injection of 131I. Data are present as means ± SD.

Immunohistochemical staining.

(A) Expression of NIS, caspase-3 and Ki-67 in CNE-2Z and CNE-2Z-NIS xenograft tumors treated with 131I or PBS (magnification, 200×). (B) Immunohistochemical analysis of protein NIS, caspase3 and Ki67. High expression of NIS protein was observed in the cells of the CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts with 131I or PBS treatment compared with the cells of the CNE-2Z xenografts with 131I or PBS treatment (p<0.001). High expression of Caspase3 protein was observed in the cells of the CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts treated with 131I compared with the other three groups (p<0.001), but low expression of Ki67 protein in the cells of the CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts treated with 131I was observed compared with the other three groups (p<0.001). Data are present as means ± SD.

Discussion

As many patients with NPC experience recurrent disease after undergoing current conventional treatment methods, novel efficient therapies need to be explored. The development of new therapies, such as targeted gene therapies may provide an effective and non-toxic method of treating NPC. Gene therapy strategies based on p53 [15-17], p16 [18] and FasL [19] have demonstrated therapeutic potential in NPC. A large number of viruses have been employed for gene therapy in animal studies and clinical trials, including adenoviruses, adeno-associated viruses, herpes viruses, poxviruses and retroviruses. In recent years, research has focused on the use of lentiviruses. Third generation lentiviral packaging systems possess a number of advantages: the packaging plasmids only encode the essential proteins required for lentivector assembly and function [20-21], and the vectors can accommodate large transgenes [up to ~10 kilobases (kb)] [22], can potentially be used for ex vivo or in vivo gene transfer into dividing and non-dividing cells [23]. However, lentivirus have several disadvantages, one of the most relevant being that the transgenes are easily integrated into the genomic DNA of host cells and thus are potentially dangerous [24]. For this reason, baculoviruses have been introduced as more safe viral vectors, they neither replicating in mammalian cells nor randomly integrating into the host genome [25, 26]. In previous studies, NIS was effectively applied as a therapeutic gene to enhance the uptake of 131I, 188Re or 211At [11, 27, 28]. In this study, we successfully constructed a cell line expressing the NIS and EGFP genes using a lentivector driven by a single promoter, EF1α. The NIS gene could be used for molecular imaging and gene-mediated radioisotope therapy, while the EGFP gene facilitated FACS analysis and cell sorting in vitro. To our knowledge, our study is the first to use a lentivirus to deliver the NIS gene for the treatment of NPC tumor xenografts in vivo. The Lv-EF1α-NIS-IRES-EGFP lentiviral particles were successfully packaged and could efficiently infect CNE-2Z cells. CNE-2Z cells stably expressing NIS and EGFP (termed CNE-2Z-NIS cells) were sorted by flow cytometry, and the expression of NIS was confirmed using qPCR, immunofluorescence and Western blotting. To address concerns regarding the biosafety of the lentivirus, we assessed the effects of exogenous NIS expression on the viability and proliferation of CNE-2Z cells in vitro; however, no significant differences in the cell viability or proliferation of CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z cells were observed. For effective treatment, it is vital that the tumor receives and maintains a high dose of the radioisotope over a long period of time. The dose of 131I received by cells expressing NIS is determined by the levels of NIS expressed, the dose of the radioisotope, and the effective half-life of the isotope in the tumor, which is determined by the physical half-life (8.021 days for 131I) and biological half-life of the isotope. In our in vivo experiments, significant 125I uptake was observed in the CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts from 30 min to 8 h after injection of 125I, reaching maximal levels within 4 h. The accumulation of 125I in CNE-2Z-NIS tumors increased gradually and reached the highest Conc value 4 h after injection of 125I, and was significantly (up to 75%) higher than the accumulation of 125I in CNE-2Z xenografts. In summary, the lentivirus generated long-lasting, stable expression of NIS which enabled high, sustained levels of 125I uptake and accumulation in the CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts for at least 8 h after injection of 125I; these results are superior to a previous study in which human stem cells were transiently transfected with NIS using baculoviruses [29]. We also investigated the therapeutic effects of 131I radionuclide therapy. Clonogenic assays showed that 131I efficiently and specifically killed CNE-2Z-NIS tumor cells in vitro (compared to CNE-2Z cells and control CNE-2Z-NIS cells treated with HBSS). In the tumor xenograft model, 131I treatment significantly retarded the growth of CNE-2Z-NIS tumors whereas the CNE-2Z tumors treated with 131I, CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z tumors treated with PBS continued increase in volume. In addition, immunohistochemical analysis for Ki67 and caspase-3 showed significantly lower numbers of proliferating cells and increased levels of apoptosis after treatment with 131I in CNE-2Z-NIS tumors compared to CNE-2Z tumors treated with 131I, CNE-2Z-NIS and CNE-2Z tumors treated with PBS, suggesting that 131I uptake by CNE-2Z-NIS cells induced tumor cell damage in addition to tumor cell death. Implantation of 125I radioactive seeds into NPC tumor tissues, under the guidance of positron emission tomography combined with computed tomography (PET-CT), proved to be an acceptable and feasible treatment with minimal damage and few complications in refractory NPC [30]. 131I has a half-life of 8 days, and expends 971 KeV of decay energy with gamma decay following rapidly after beta decay, which is more powerful than 125I. The electrons have a tissue penetration of 0.6 to 2 mm [31], which induces a low degree of injury to the healthy tissues around the tumor. This indicates that the use of NIS gene therapy in combination with 131I may have significant potential as an effective, low toxicity treatment in NPC. In our study, 131I treatment significantly retarded the growth of CNE-2Z-NIS xenografts but did not affect mice’s food intake or physical activity. The NIS gene must be properly targeted to the tumor cell membrane to be functional [32]; however, the EF1α promoter can drive the expression of transgenes in a wide variety of human cell lines and has no tumor-specificity [33, 34]. The use of cell-specific promoters in vivo is advantageous due to their lower sensitivity to promoter inactivation and lower risk of activating the host cell defense machinery [35]. As such, future studies will focus on exploring and testing novel gene promoters that specifically target NPC cells to achieve safer, more specific, robust and stable therapeutic effects for radionuclide therapy in NPC, and the use of more powerful therapeutic radionucleotides, such as 211At or 188Re, should be investigated in NPC cells expressing NIS.

Conclusion

EF1α promoter-driven expression of NIS enabled significant uptake and accumulation of radioisotopes in NPC cells, and provided effective therapeutic effects in vitro and in vivo. NIS gene therapy in combination with radionuclide treatment deserves further research as a novel treatment for NPC.
  34 in total

Review 1.  Clinical review 128: Current approaches to primary therapy for papillary and follicular thyroid cancer.

Authors:  E L Mazzaferri; R T Kloos
Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2001-04       Impact factor: 5.958

2.  Analysis of relative gene expression data using real-time quantitative PCR and the 2(-Delta Delta C(T)) Method.

Authors:  K J Livak; T D Schmittgen
Journal:  Methods       Date:  2001-12       Impact factor: 3.608

Review 3.  Baculoviral vectors for gene delivery: a review.

Authors:  Yu-Chen Hu
Journal:  Curr Gene Ther       Date:  2008-02       Impact factor: 4.391

Review 4.  The biology of the sodium iodide symporter and its potential for targeted gene delivery.

Authors:  Mohan Hingorani; Christine Spitzweg; Georges Vassaux; Kate Newbold; Alan Melcher; Hardev Pandha; Richard Vile; Kevin Harrington
Journal:  Curr Cancer Drug Targets       Date:  2010-03       Impact factor: 3.428

5.  Recombinant adeno-associated virus mediated RNA interference inhibits metastasis of nasopharyngeal cancer cells in vivo and in vitro by suppression of Epstein-Barr virus encoded LMP-1.

Authors:  Xiangping Li; Xiong Liu; Christine Y S Li; Yanqing Ding; David Chau; Gang Li; Hsiang-Fu Kung; Marie C M Lin; Ying Peng
Journal:  Int J Oncol       Date:  2006-09       Impact factor: 5.650

6.  Systematic comparison of constitutive promoters and the doxycycline-inducible promoter.

Authors:  Jane Yuxia Qin; Li Zhang; Kayla L Clift; Imge Hulur; Andy Peng Xiang; Bing-Zhong Ren; Bruce T Lahn
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-05-12       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  Effective cancer therapy with the alpha-particle emitter [211At]astatine in a mouse model of genetically modified sodium/iodide symporter-expressing tumors.

Authors:  Thorsten Petrich; Leticia Quintanilla-Martinez; Zekiye Korkmaz; Elenore Samson; Hans Jürgen Helmeke; Geerd Jürgen Meyer; Wolfram H Knapp; Eyck Pötter
Journal:  Clin Cancer Res       Date:  2006-02-15       Impact factor: 12.531

8.  [Clinical features of 337 patients with recurrent nasopharyngeal carcinoma].

Authors:  Jia-Xin Li; Tai-Xiang Lu; Ying Huang; Fei Han; Chun-Yan Chen; Wei-Wei Xiao
Journal:  Chin J Cancer       Date:  2010-01

9.  Evaluation of [18F]-tetrafluoroborate as a potential PET imaging agent for the human sodium/iodide symporter in a new colon carcinoma cell line, HCT116, expressing hNIS.

Authors:  Amanda J Weeks; Maite Jauregui-Osoro; Marcel Cleij; Julia E Blower; James R Ballinger; Philip J Blower
Journal:  Nucl Med Commun       Date:  2011-02       Impact factor: 1.690

10.  Co-treatment with arsenic trioxide and ganciclovir reduces tumor volume in a murine xenograft model of nasopharyngeal carcinoma.

Authors:  Mark D Sides; Meredith L Sosulski; Fayong Luo; Zhen Lin; Erik K Flemington; Joseph A Lasky
Journal:  Virol J       Date:  2013-05-16       Impact factor: 4.099

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1.  Bone Marrow-Derived Mesenchymal Stem Cell-Mediated Dual-Gene Therapy for Glioblastoma.

Authors:  Shuo Shi; Min Zhang; Rui Guo; Ying Miao; Biao Li
Journal:  Hum Gene Ther       Date:  2018-10-02       Impact factor: 5.695

2.  Protective Effects of Royal Jelly on Oxymetholone-Induced Liver Injury in Mice.

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  2 in total

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