| Literature DB >> 8674059 |
C T Lee1, S Wu, D Gabrilovich, H Chen, S Nadaf-Rahrov, I F Ciernik, D P Carbone.
Abstract
Insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) are often essential for the maintenance of the malignant phenotype, and in lung cancer the IGF-I receptor (IGF-Ir) is often expressed at high levels. Stable transfection of antisense plasmids expressing the first 300 bp of the IGF-Ir reduces the tumorigenicity of a variety of tumor cell lines and has been reported to induce systemic antitumor effects on established, non-gene-modified tumors in animal model systems. We have constructed an adenovirus expressing an antisense IGF-Ir (Ad-IGF-Ir/as) in an attempt to develop these observations into a clinical therapeutic approach. A single transduction by Ad-IGF-Ir/as (at a multiplicity of infection of 10:1) decreased the IGF-Ir number by about 50% in human lung cancer cell lines NCI H460 and SCC5, as measured by an 125I-labeled IGF-I competitive binding assay. After the transduction of these human lung cancer cell lines by Ad-IGF-Ir/as, the soft agar clonogenicity was reduced by 84%. The i.p. treatment of nude mice bearing established i.p. NCI H460 cells resulted in prolonged survival compared to that of nude mice treated with a reporter virus. These results suggest that Ad-IGF-Ir/as has a therapeutic effect on established human lung cancer xenografts and may represent an effective and practical cancer gene therapy strategy.Entities:
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Year: 1996 PMID: 8674059
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 12.701