| Literature DB >> 29326689 |
Faroogh Marofi1, Ghasem Vahedi2, Alireza Biglari3, Abdolreza Esmaeilzadeh4,5, Seyyed Shamsadin Athari4.
Abstract
In recent years, in light of the promising potentials of mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (MSCs) for carrying therapeutic anticancer genes, a complete revisitation on old chemotherapy-based paradigms has been established. This review attempted to bring forward and introduce the novel therapeutic opportunities of using genetically engineered MSCs. The simplicities and advantages of MSCs for medical applications make them a unique and promising option in the case of cancer therapy. Some of the superiorities of using MSCs as therapeutic gene micro-carriers are the easy cell-extraction procedures and their abundant proliferation capacity in vitro without losing their main biological properties. Targeted therapy by using MSCs as the delivery vehicles of therapeutic genes is a new approach in the treatment of various types of cancers. Some of the distinct properties of MSCs, such as tumor-tropism, non-immunogenicity, stimulatory effect on the anti-inflammatory molecules, inhibitory effect on inflammatory responses, non-toxicity against the normal tissues, and easy processes for the clinical use, have formed the basis of attention to MSCs. They can be easily used for the treatment of damaged or injured tissues, regenerative medicine, and immune disorders. This review focused on the drugability of MSCs and their potential for the delivery of candidate anticancer genes. It also briefly reviewed the vectors and methods used for MSC-mediated gene therapy of malignancies. Also, the challenges, limitations, and considerations in using MSCs for gene therapy of cancer and the new methods developed for resolution of these problems are reviewed.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; cell therapy; gene therapy; mesenchymal stem cells; vector
Year: 2017 PMID: 29326689 PMCID: PMC5741703 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.01770
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
A list of cytokines, chemokines, prodrugs, and other agents with the anticancer properties that were transferred (or can be transferred) into the mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (MSCs) and integrated into genomic material then delivered by the cell toward the tumor site(s)/cells. The reports listed in three categories including in vitro studies, preclinical (mouse in vivo) studies, and clinical trials (human in vivo).
| Factor | Application | MSCs | Host | Vector | Tumor model | Result | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IFN-γ | Immunostimulatory, apoptosis inducing | Human | Adenoviral (Ad) vector | Inhibits the proliferation of K562 cells and induces apoptosis | ( | ||
| Oncolytic viruses | Destroy tumors by viral replication | Human | Recombinant Ad vectors | Orthotopic (breast, lung, ovarian). Metastasis (breast) | Increased the survival of tumor-bearing mice. Further, decreased the tumor growth | ( | |
| IL-27 | Reduction of inflammation and autoimmune diseases | Human AD-MSCs | In vitro | Lentiviral vector (LVs) | The LVs did not impact MSC characteristics and inhibited the inflammatory responses | ( | |
| IL-18 | Stimulates innate immunity and Th1–Th2-mediated responses, antitumor effect, reduces tumorigenesis, induces apoptosis, and inhibits tumor angiogenesis | Human | LVs | MCF-7 and HCC1937 cells | IL-18-producing MSCs significantly suppressed the proliferation, migration and invasion of the MCF-7, and HCC1937 breast cancer cells | ( | |
| IL-7 | Essential role in the survival and homeostatic proliferation of peripheral naive T cells | Human | Retroviral Vector | IL-7-MSCs have a dose-independent effect on naive | ( | ||
| IL-35 | Reduction of inflammation and autoimmune diseases | Human | LVs | Mouse splenocytes | Induces the proliferation of Treg cell, reduces the activity of Th17 and Th1 | ( | |
| IFN-α | Immunostimulatory, apoptosis inducing, and anti-angiogenic | C57BL/6 mice | C57BL/6 mice | (rAAV) | Metastasis (melanoma) | Increased apoptosis and decreased proliferation and angiogenesis of tumor | ( |
| IFN-β | Induces differentiation | Human | Female C.B-17 SCID mice | Ad vector | Metastasis (prostate, breast, melanoma) | A significant reduction in tumor volume following IFN-β expressing MSC therapy | ( |
| S-phase accumulation, apoptosis | Human | Male athymic nude mice (nu/nu) | Ad vector | Orthotopic (glioma) | Injected MSC-IFN-β | ( | |
| IL-2 | Immunomodulation | Rats | Male Fisher 344 rats | Ad vector | Orthotopic (glioma) | Augmented the antitumor effect and prolonged the survival of tumor-bearing rats | ( |
| IL-12 | Activates CTLs and NK cells and stimulates production of IFN-γ | Mouse | Female syngeneic C57BL/6 and BALB/c inbreed mice | Ad vector | Subcutaneous (melanoma, Hepatoma, Lung cancer) | Systemic administration of MSC/IL-12 reduced the growth of 786- 0 RCC and significantly prolonged survival of tumor-bearing mice | ( |
| CX3CL1 | Activates CTLs and NK cells | BALB/c, C57BL/6 BM-MSC | Female C57BL/6 (H-2b), BALB/c (H-2d), and BALB/C nude mice | Ad vector | Metastasis (melanoma, colon) | Suppressed the growth of multiple tumor metastases and prolonged survival in mice | ( |
| GCV/HSV-tk | Prodrug conversion | Human | Athymic nude mice (Balb/c-nu/nu) | Retroviral vector | Subcutaneous, orthotopic (glioma) | Profound bystander effect on neighboring tumor cells | ( |
| 5-FC/CD | Prodrug conversion (5-FC to 5-FU) | Human | Athymic nude mice (Balb/c-nu/nu) | Retroviral vector | Subcutaneous (melanoma, Colon) | Complete tumor regression in a dose-dependent manner or did not even allow the establishment of the tumor | ( |
| NK4 | Inhibits angiogenesis and promotes apoptosis | Female BALB/c mice | BALB/c mice | Ad vector | Metastasis (colon) | Significantly prolonged survival of the C-26 tumor-bearing mice by inhibiting tumor-associated angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis and inducing apoptosis of the tumor cells | ( |
| TRAIL | Induces apoptosis | Human | Nude mice | LVss | Subcutaneous (breast) | TRAIL-expressing MSCs were able to reduce tumor growth and metastases | ( |
| TNF-α | Induction of apoptosis and necrosis | Human | Nude mice | Recombinant retroviral vector | Melanoma (A375), breast carcinoma (SKBR3, MDA-MB-231), colon carcinoma (HT29), ovarian carcinoma (SKOV3), and glioblastoma (U87-MG) cells | Induces apoptosis of tumor cell lines | ( |
| CCL5 | Recruits MSCs | C57BL/6 mice | C57BL/6 mice | Ad vector | Orthotopic | HSV-Tk transfected MSCs led to a significant reduction of primary pancreatic tumor growth and metastases | ( |
| TSP-1 | Anti-angiogenic effects | Human | SCID mice | LVs | Human glioblastoma (GBMs, LN229-mCherry-Fluc tumor) | Inhibits tumor progression and extends survival of mice bearing highly vascularized GBM | ( |
| PE cytotoxin | Blocks protein synthesis, antitumor agent | Human | SCID mice | LVs | Glioblastoma | Long-term survival of mice | ( |
| IL-24 | anticancer agent, anti-angiogenic, induction of apoptosis and cell cycle arrest | Human | BALB/c nu/nu mice | Ad vector | A549 lung cancer cells | IL24-MSCs promote apoptosis, inhibit proliferation, and decrease the vascularity of xenograft tumors | ( |
| Hypothesized suppressor effect on the tumor growth, anti-angiogenic effect, induction of apoptosis and cell cycle arrest | – | Athymic nude mice/SCID mice | Ad vector | Thyroid carcinoma/Hodgkin’s lymphoma | Theoretically IL24 can promote apoptosis | ( | |
| IL-25 | Hypothesized pro-apoptotic action | Mouse | C57BL/6 mice | Lipofection | Pancreatic cancer | Hypothesized induction of apoptosis in cancer cells | ( |
| Soluble IL-1 receptor–like–1 (sST2) | Decoy receptor for IL-33 in order to enhance immunoregulatory and anti-inflammatory effects of MSCs | Human | male BALB/c mice | LVs | Endotoxin-Induced Acute Lung Injury; male BALB/c mice challenged with intranasal instillation of LPS | Remarkable reduction in lung airspace inflammation. | ( |
| IL-10 | Immune suppressor. | Human | Inbred male DA (RT1n) and Lewis (LEW) (RT1l) rat | lentivirus-based plasmid construct | liver allograft in mice model | Long-term survival of recipient’s mice. | ( |
| HSV-Tk, Ganciclovir | Suicide gene therapy | Autologous BM-MSCs | Human (Clinical trial) | Gamma-retroviral | Advanced, recurrent or metastatic gastrointestinal or hepatopancreatobiliary adenocarcinoma | Phase I/II clinical trial done and Phases III/IV are underway | ( |
| HGF | Protects against fibrosis. | Autologous BM-MSCs | Human (Clinical trial) | Plasmid HGF | Four patients with pulmonary silicosis | Chest distress gradually ameliorated at six months post-therapy, accompanied by the significant improvement of pulmonary function | ( |
rAAV, recombinant adeno-associated virus; WJ, Wharton’s Jelly.
The features, advantages, and disadvantages of the most used viral and non-viral vectors for gene transferring into the target cells (65–78).
| Vector type | Characteristics | Advantages | Limitation | Tropism | Host genome | Transgene expression | Packaging capacity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adenovirus | 36 kb dsDNA | Large genome | High immunogenicity | – | – | – | – |
| Retrovirus (lentivirus) | 8 kb ssRNA | Large genome | Insertional mutagenesis | Dividing and non-dividing cells | Integration in genome | Stable | 8 kb |
| Adeno-associated virus (AAV) | 4.7 kb ssDNA | Low immunogenicity | Small genome | Dividing and non-dividing cells | No integration | Stable in non-dividing cells | 5 kb |
| Herpes virus saimirii (HVS) | - | Transduction efficiencies of up to 95% | Safe replication-deficient HVS vector | – | – | – | – |
| Oncogenic retroviruses | Moloney murine leukemia virus (MoMLV) | Large genome | Shorter expression time | – | – | – | – |
| Baculovirus | Viruses are derived from an insect: | Replication-defective | Shorter expression time | – | – | – | – |
| Plasmid | To clone a DNA insert with maximum size of 15 kb | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Non-viral | Calcium phosphate, liposomes, niosomes Nanoparticles, Spermine–pullulan | Ease of synthesis, cell/tissue targeting, low immune response, and unrestricted plasmid size | Shorter expression time | – | – | – | – |
Gene-directed enzyme pro-drug therapy (GDEPT) of cancers using the various types of mesenchymal stromal/stem cell (MSCs).
| Factor | Host | MSCs | Vector | Tumor model | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TK (GCV) | Nude mice | BM-MSCs of rat | Non-viral | Pulmonary melanoma metastasis | ( |
| Nude mice | Human BM-MSCs | Retrovirus | Human glioma and rat glioma | ( | |
| Nude mice | Human BM-MSCs | Adenovirus | Human glioma | ( | |
| Nude mice | BM-MSCs of rat | Adenovirus | Lung metastases | ( | |
| Nude mice | Human BM-MSCs | Baculovirs | Human glioma | ( | |
| Nude mice | Human ASCs | Retrovirus | Glioblastoma multiforme | ( | |
| Mice Murine | Mice BM-MSCs | Non-viral | Pancreatic carcinoma cells of murine | ( | |
| Nude mice | Murine BM-MSCs | Non-viral | Hepatocellular carcinoma cells of human | ( | |
| Nude mice | Murine BM-MSCs | Non-viral | Orthotopic pancreatic breast cancer of mouse | ( | |
| CDb (5-FC) | Athymic nude mice | Human BM-MSCs | Non-viral | Gastric cancer cells of human | ( |
| Nude mice | Rat BM-MSCs | Adenovirus | Rat glioma cells | ( | |
| Male Fisher 344 | Rat BM-MSCs | Adenovirus | Rat glioma cells | ( | |
| CDy::UPRT (5-FC) | Male SpragueeDawley | Human ASCs | Retrovirus | Rat glioblastoma cells | ( |
| Athymic nude mice | Human ASCs | Retrovirus | Human prostate cells | ( | |
| Athymic nude mice | Human ASCs | Retrovirus | Human melanoma cells | ( | |
| CE (CPT-11) | Rat Fischer 344 female | Human ASC | Plasmid | Rat glioma cells | ( |
| CYP2B6 (CPA) | Female nude mice | Murine | Retrovirus | Human glioma cells | ( |
BM-MSCs, bone marrow-derived mesenchymal stem cells; AT-MSCs, adipose tissue mesenchymal stem cells; i.v., intravenous; s.c., subcutaneous; dTRAIL, dodecameric human TRAIL; hASCs, human adipose-derived stroma and stem cells; NSCs, neural stem cells, CDy::UPRT, fusion yeast cytosine deaminase::uracil phosphoribosyltransferase gene.
Figure 1The schematic picture represents the strategies of anticancer gene therapy using mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (MSCs) as gene vehicles. Anticancer gene can be transferred into MSCs by three main groups of techniques; viral vectors, non-viral vectors, and physical methods. There are two approaches for gene therapy of cancer patients; ex vivo, in vivo. Four groups of anticancer gene therapies have been developed to date; augmentation-, silencing-, suicide-, and immune-gene therapy.
Figure 2The schematic picture shows the mechanism of mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (MSCs) migration/homing toward injured/cancer tissues. MSCs moving toward target tissue can be characterized by three stages: flowing through blood-flow, moving toward chemoattractants, and adhesion by surface receptors, translocation from blood flow toward injured/cancer tissue. The figure also demonstrates the endothelial–MSCs interactions, receptors, and the chemokines which are involved in MSCs migration procedures. The tumor-affected endothelial cells produce selectins, integrin ligands, and chemokines. These secretory stimulants and chemoattractants recruited MCSs to the tumor site.
Figure 3A schematic picture depicts the procedures for the isolation, culture, gene transfer, and in vivo administration of the mesenchymal stromal/stem cells (MSCs). The schema also shows the routes that the MSCs traverse toward their target; tumor sites, and cancerous cells. The abbreviations on the figure include the following: BM, bone marrow; UCB, umbilical cord blood; AT, adipose tissue; IV, intravenous; IT, Intrathecal; IP, Intraperitoneal.