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ABSTRACT: Ovarian cancer represents a malignancy suitable for cell and gene therapy approaches owing to its containment within the peritoneal cavity, even at advanced tumor stages. As regulation of transgene expression would be preferable for conducting clinical trials for reasons of safety, we investigated whether intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration of retroviral vector-transduced fibroblasts encoding murine interferon-alpha (IFN-alpha) could have therapeutic activity, and compared its effect with the antitumor effects of fibroblasts producing IFN-alpha under a rapamycin analogue (AP21967)-inducible promoter. Human and murine fibroblasts were recruited into the solid component of transplantable ovarian cancer-grown i.p. in severe combined immunodeficiency mice. Multiple administrations of fibroblasts producing IFN-alpha in a constitutive manner showed therapeutic efficacy, leading to significant prolongation of survival in the majority of animals, associated with inhibition of tumor angiogenesis. Compared to cells transduced by the constitutive vector, fibroblasts transduced by the inducible vector released twofold higher IFN-alpha levels in vitro, following induction by AP21967, and production of the cytokine was under pharmacologic control both in vitro and in vivo. However, these cells elicited only modest therapeutic effects in vivo. Overall, these findings indicate that intracavitary IFN-alpha gene therapy using engineered fibroblasts requires sustained production of IFN-alpha to achieve durable antitumor effects.
Gene Therapy 07/2006; 13(12):953-65. · 3.71 Impact Factor
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S Indraccolo,
E Gola,
A Rosato,
S Minuzzo,
W Habeler,
V Tisato, V Roni,
G Esposito,
M Morini,
A Albini,
D M Noonan,
M Ferrantini,
A Amadori,
L Chieco-Bianchi
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ABSTRACT: The administration of different angiogenesis inhibitors by gene transfer has been shown to result in inhibition of tumor growth in animal tumor models, but the potency of these genes has been only partially evaluated in comparative studies to date. To identify the most effective anti-angiogenic molecule for delivery by retroviral vectors, we investigated the effects of angiostatin, endostatin and interferon(IFN)-alpha(1) gene transfer in in vivo models of breast cancer induced neovascularization and tumor growth. Moloney leukemia virus-based retroviral vectors for expression of murine angiostatin, endostatin and IFN-alpha(1) were generated, characterized, and used to transduce human breast cancer cell lines (MCF7 and MDA-MB435). Secretion of the recombinant proteins was confirmed by biological and Western blotting assays. Their production did not impair in vitro growth of these breast cancer cells nor their viability, and did not interfere with the expression of angiogenic factors. However, primary endothelial cell proliferation and migration in vitro were inhibited by supernatants of the transduced cells containing angiostatin, endostatin, and IFN-alpha(1). Stable gene transfer of the IFN-alpha(1) cDNA by retroviral vectors in both MCF7 and MDA-MB435 cells resulted in a marked and long-lasting inhibition of tumor growth in nude mice that was associated with reduced vascularization. Endostatin reduced the in vivo growth of MDA-MB435, but not MCF7 cells, despite similar levels of in vivo production, and angiostatin did not impair the in vivo growth of either cell line. These findings indicate heterogeneity in the therapeutic efficacy of angiostatic molecules delivered by viral vectors and suggest that gene therapy with IFN-alpha(1) and endostatin might be useful for treatment of breast cancer.
Gene Therapy 08/2002; 9(13):867-78. · 3.71 Impact Factor
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R Zamarchi,
P Allavena,
A Borsetti,
L Stievano,
V Tosello,
N Marcato,
G Esposito, V Roni,
C Paganin,
G Bianchi,
F Titti,
P Verani,
G Gerosa,
A Amadori
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ABSTRACT: In this paper we addressed the expression of the HIV co-receptors CXCR-4 and CCR-5 in human thymocytes by phenotypic, molecular and functional approaches. Cytofluorimetric analysis disclosed that CXCR-4 was constitutively expressed by freshly isolated thymocytes (~10 000 molecules/cell in about 30% of thymocytes); the receptor was endowed with functional activity, as it mediated polarization, migration and intracellular Ca2+ increase in response to its ligand, SDF-1. On the contrary, CCR-5 expression in freshly isolated thymocytes was significantly lower (<4000 molecules/cell in less than 5% of the cells), and no functional response to CCR-5 agonists could be documented. Northern blot analysis of freshly isolated thymocytes showed high CXCR-4 mRNA levels, whereas the message for CCR-5 was barely detectable. On the other hand, a modest increase in the expression of CCR-5 was associated with in vitro thymocyte stimulation, and CCR-5 density at the cell surface attained CXCR-4 figures in most cases. None the less, no functional response to CCR-5 agonists could be documented in in vitro stimulated thymocytes. In vitro infection of thymocytes by CAT-expressing recombinant HIV bearing the envelope glycoproteins from different isolates showed that T-tropic strains, which use CXCR-4 as a co-receptor, were more efficient in infecting thymocytes than M-tropic strains, which preferentially use CCR-5. Altogether, these data indicate that expression of the major co-receptors involved in infection by M-tropic HIV strains is very poor in human thymocytes, and would suggest that thymocyte infection by M-tropic HIV strains may be a rare event in vivo.
Clinical & Experimental Immunology 02/2002; 127(2):321-30. · 3.36 Impact Factor