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Evaluating Baculovirus as a Vector for Human Prostate Cancer Gene Therapy

Gene therapy represents an attractive strategy for the non-invasive treatment of prostate cancer, where current clinical interventions show limited efficacy. Here, we evaluate the use of the insect virus, baculovirus (BV), as a novel vector for human prostate cancer gene therapy. Since prostate tumo...

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Autores principales: Swift, Stephanie L., Rivera, Guillermo C., Dussupt, Vincent, Leadley, Regina M., Hudson, Lucy C., MA de Ridder, Corrina, Kraaij, Robert, Burns, Julie E., Maitland, Norman J., Georgopoulos, Lindsay J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3675042/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23755250
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065557
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author Swift, Stephanie L.
Rivera, Guillermo C.
Dussupt, Vincent
Leadley, Regina M.
Hudson, Lucy C.
MA de Ridder, Corrina
Kraaij, Robert
Burns, Julie E.
Maitland, Norman J.
Georgopoulos, Lindsay J.
author_facet Swift, Stephanie L.
Rivera, Guillermo C.
Dussupt, Vincent
Leadley, Regina M.
Hudson, Lucy C.
MA de Ridder, Corrina
Kraaij, Robert
Burns, Julie E.
Maitland, Norman J.
Georgopoulos, Lindsay J.
author_sort Swift, Stephanie L.
collection PubMed
description Gene therapy represents an attractive strategy for the non-invasive treatment of prostate cancer, where current clinical interventions show limited efficacy. Here, we evaluate the use of the insect virus, baculovirus (BV), as a novel vector for human prostate cancer gene therapy. Since prostate tumours represent a heterogeneous environment, a therapeutic approach that achieves long-term regression must be capable of targeting multiple transformed cell populations. Furthermore, discrimination in the targeting of malignant compared to non-malignant cells would have value in minimising side effects. We employed a number of prostate cancer models to analyse the potential for BV to achieve these goals. In vitro, both traditional prostate cell lines as well as primary epithelial or stromal cells derived from patient prostate biopsies, in two- or three-dimensional cultures, were used. We also evaluated BV in vivo in murine prostate cancer xenograft models. BV was capable of preferentially transducing invasive malignant prostate cancer cell lines compared to early stage cancers and non-malignant samples, a restriction that was not a function of nuclear import. Of more clinical relevance, primary patient-derived prostate cancer cells were also efficiently transduced by BV, with robust rates observed in epithelial cells of basal phenotype, which expressed BV-encoded transgenes faster than epithelial cells of a more differentiated, luminal phenotype. Maximum transduction capacity was observed in stromal cells. BV was able to penetrate through three-dimensional structures, including in vitro spheroids and in vivo orthotopic xenografts. BV vectors containing a nitroreductase transgene in a gene-directed enzyme pro-drug therapy approach were capable of efficiently killing malignant prostate targets following administration of the pro-drug, CB1954. Thus, BV is capable of transducing a large proportion of prostate cell types within a heterogeneous 3-D prostate tumour, can facilitate cell death using a pro-drug approach, and shows promise as a vector for the treatment of prostate cancer.
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spelling pubmed-36750422013-06-10 Evaluating Baculovirus as a Vector for Human Prostate Cancer Gene Therapy Swift, Stephanie L. Rivera, Guillermo C. Dussupt, Vincent Leadley, Regina M. Hudson, Lucy C. MA de Ridder, Corrina Kraaij, Robert Burns, Julie E. Maitland, Norman J. Georgopoulos, Lindsay J. PLoS One Research Article Gene therapy represents an attractive strategy for the non-invasive treatment of prostate cancer, where current clinical interventions show limited efficacy. Here, we evaluate the use of the insect virus, baculovirus (BV), as a novel vector for human prostate cancer gene therapy. Since prostate tumours represent a heterogeneous environment, a therapeutic approach that achieves long-term regression must be capable of targeting multiple transformed cell populations. Furthermore, discrimination in the targeting of malignant compared to non-malignant cells would have value in minimising side effects. We employed a number of prostate cancer models to analyse the potential for BV to achieve these goals. In vitro, both traditional prostate cell lines as well as primary epithelial or stromal cells derived from patient prostate biopsies, in two- or three-dimensional cultures, were used. We also evaluated BV in vivo in murine prostate cancer xenograft models. BV was capable of preferentially transducing invasive malignant prostate cancer cell lines compared to early stage cancers and non-malignant samples, a restriction that was not a function of nuclear import. Of more clinical relevance, primary patient-derived prostate cancer cells were also efficiently transduced by BV, with robust rates observed in epithelial cells of basal phenotype, which expressed BV-encoded transgenes faster than epithelial cells of a more differentiated, luminal phenotype. Maximum transduction capacity was observed in stromal cells. BV was able to penetrate through three-dimensional structures, including in vitro spheroids and in vivo orthotopic xenografts. BV vectors containing a nitroreductase transgene in a gene-directed enzyme pro-drug therapy approach were capable of efficiently killing malignant prostate targets following administration of the pro-drug, CB1954. Thus, BV is capable of transducing a large proportion of prostate cell types within a heterogeneous 3-D prostate tumour, can facilitate cell death using a pro-drug approach, and shows promise as a vector for the treatment of prostate cancer. Public Library of Science 2013-06-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3675042/ /pubmed/23755250 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065557 Text en © 2013 Swift et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Swift, Stephanie L.
Rivera, Guillermo C.
Dussupt, Vincent
Leadley, Regina M.
Hudson, Lucy C.
MA de Ridder, Corrina
Kraaij, Robert
Burns, Julie E.
Maitland, Norman J.
Georgopoulos, Lindsay J.
Evaluating Baculovirus as a Vector for Human Prostate Cancer Gene Therapy
title Evaluating Baculovirus as a Vector for Human Prostate Cancer Gene Therapy
title_full Evaluating Baculovirus as a Vector for Human Prostate Cancer Gene Therapy
title_fullStr Evaluating Baculovirus as a Vector for Human Prostate Cancer Gene Therapy
title_full_unstemmed Evaluating Baculovirus as a Vector for Human Prostate Cancer Gene Therapy
title_short Evaluating Baculovirus as a Vector for Human Prostate Cancer Gene Therapy
title_sort evaluating baculovirus as a vector for human prostate cancer gene therapy
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3675042/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23755250
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0065557
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