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- Title
Targeted hepatocellular carcinoma proapoptotic BikDD gene therapy.
- Authors
Li, L-Y; Dai, H-Y; Yeh, F-L; Kan, S-F; Lang, J; Hsu, J L; Jeng, L-B; Chen, Y-H; Sher, Y-P; Lin, W-C; Hung, M-C
- Abstract
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), the third leading cause of cancer death in the world, is the most general type of primary liver cancer. Although current treatment modalities, such as liver transplantation, resection, percutaneous ablation, transarterial embolization, chemotherapy and radiotherapy are potentially curative, these methods are not universally applicable to all of HCC patients, especially for those with poor prognosis in which no effective remedy is available. Therefore, development of novel therapeutic approach for the treatment of HCC is urgently needed. In the current study, we developed a promising HCC-targeted gene therapy vector driven by liver cancer-specific α-fetoprotein promoter/enhancer coupled to an established platform technology. The activity of this expression vector is comparable with or even higher than that of strong cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter and exhibits strong promoter activity in liver cancer cells/tumors, but has nearly no or very low activity in normal cells/organs in vitro and in orthotopic animal models in vivo. Its cancer specificity exceeds that of the CMV promoter, which expresses non-specifically in both normal and tumor cells. In addition, targeted expression of a therapeutic BikDD, a mutant of proapoptotic gene Bik effectively and preferentially killed liver cancer cells, but not normal cells and significantly repressed growth of HCC tumors, and prolonged survival in multiple xenograft and syngeneic orthotopic mouse models of HCC through intravenous systemic gene delivery. Importantly, systemic administration of BikDD by our expression vector exerted no systemically acute toxicity compared with CMV-BikDD in mice. Taken together, this study elucidates a relatively safe and highly effective and specific systemic gene therapy strategy for liver cancer, and is worthy of further development for future clinical trials.
- Subjects
LIVER cancer; GENE therapy; CANCER treatment; GENE targeting; CAUSES of death; CANCER chemotherapy; CANCER radiotherapy; CANCER cell growth; LABORATORY mice; CLINICAL trials
- Publication
Oncogene, 2011, Vol 30, Issue 15, p1773
- ISSN
0950-9232
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1038/onc.2010.558