| Literature DB >> 9679563 |
Y Niitsu1, Y Takahashi, N Ban, T Takayama, T Saito, T Katahira, Y Umetsu, T Nakajima, M Ohi, T Kuga, S Sakamaki, T Matsunaga, Y Hirayama, H Kuroda, H Homma, J Kato, K Kogawa.
Abstract
In order to directly prove the involvement of GST-pi in drug resistance, it's antisense gene was transduced into human colorectal cancer cell line which has been shown to express high level of GST-pi and the sensitivity of this cell line to anticancer drugs were assessed. The transfectant showed higher sensitivity to adriamycin (3.3-fold), Cisplatnum (2.3-fold), Melphalan (2.2-fold), Etoposode (2.2-fold) than the parental cell, while the sensitivity to vincristine, mitomicin C, 5-fluorouracil was unchanged by transfection. When the transfectant and parental cells were innoculated in nude mice and treated with adriamycin, a significant suppression of tumor growth was observed with the transfectant as compared to the parental cell. On the basis of this observation, we then transduced sense GST-pi gene into human bone marrow stem cells (CD34+ cells) to protect them from toxicity of anticancer drug. The gene transduced CD34+ cells formed more CFU-GM than nontransduced CD34+ cell in the presence of adriamycin (30 ng/ml). Thus, the autotransplantation of GST-pi gene transduced cell into cancer patients to protect the bone marrow from subsequent highdose chemotherapy is considered to be a new strategy for cancer gene therapy.Entities:
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Year: 1998 PMID: 9679563 DOI: 10.1016/s0009-2797(97)00169-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Biol Interact ISSN: 0009-2797 Impact factor: 5.192