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- Title
Therapeutic effect of recombinant adenovirus on AGS cancer cell line.
- Authors
Salkhori, Najmeh Yarkeh; Farivar, Taghi Naserpour; Noroozi, Jamileh; Najafipour, Reza; Pakzad, Parviz; Alizadeh, SafarAli
- Abstract
Oncolytic viruses are tumor selective and potential anticancer agents. Adenovirus type 5 is the most commonly used oncolytic agent for treating tumors. The poor expression of the viral receptor on the surface of tumor cells is a major problem in the use of adenovirus type 5. The study aimed to improve the attachment of the modified adenovirus to tumor cells by applying an analog of somatostatin [SST] [i.e., octreotate]. In the adenovirus fiber knob's HI-loop, the octreotate sequence was introduced. By utilizing the calcium phosphate technique, modified virus was transmitted to HEK 293 packing cells, and a new virus was generated. Using the TCID50 technique, the virus titer was determined. The human adenocarcinoma stomach cell line was challenged with modified adenovirus and wild-type 5 strain [AGS]. Next, compounds were investigated for cytopathic impacts. The modified virus was validated employing PCR and sequencing. In comparison to the wild-type adenovirus, the modified adenovirus was found to be more capable of infecting AGS cells. Experiments showed that over 81% of AGS cells treated with fiber-modified Ad5 were killed after three to four days. This study suggests that fiber-modified Ad5 is an oncolytic agent against AGS cells.
- Subjects
ADENOVIRUSES; RECOMBINANT viruses; THERAPEUTIC use of antineoplastic agents; CANCER cells; VIROTHERAPY
- Publication
Medbiotech Journal, 2021, Vol 5, Issue 4, p37
- ISSN
2209-2528
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.22034/MBT.2021.319102.1007