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Human menstrual blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells as a cellular vehicle for malignant glioma gene therapy

Despite many advances in conventional treatment strategies, there is no effective treatment modality for malignant gliomas. Gene therapy may offer a promising option for gliomas and several gene therapy approaches have shown anti-tumor efficiency in previous studies. Mesenchymal stem cell-based gene...

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Autores principales: Wang, Xiao-Jun, Xiang, Bing-Yu, Ding, Ya-Hui, Chen, Lu, Zou, Hai, Mou, Xiao-Zhou, Xiang, Charlie
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5601654/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28938558
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.17621
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author Wang, Xiao-Jun
Xiang, Bing-Yu
Ding, Ya-Hui
Chen, Lu
Zou, Hai
Mou, Xiao-Zhou
Xiang, Charlie
author_facet Wang, Xiao-Jun
Xiang, Bing-Yu
Ding, Ya-Hui
Chen, Lu
Zou, Hai
Mou, Xiao-Zhou
Xiang, Charlie
author_sort Wang, Xiao-Jun
collection PubMed
description Despite many advances in conventional treatment strategies, there is no effective treatment modality for malignant gliomas. Gene therapy may offer a promising option for gliomas and several gene therapy approaches have shown anti-tumor efficiency in previous studies. Mesenchymal stem cell-based gene therapies, in which stem cells are genetically engineered to express therapeutic molecules, have shown tremendous potential because of their innate homing ability. In this study, human menstrual blood-derived MSCs (MenSC), a novel type of multipotential MSCs displays tropism for human malignant glioma when used as a gene delivery vehicle for therapeutics. Secretable trimeric TRAIL (stTRAIL) contains the receptor-binding domain of TRAIL, a death ligand that induces apoptosis in tumor cells. To overexpress stTRAIL, MenSCs were infected with efficient adenoviral serotype 35 vectors that had no influence on its broad multipotency and low immunophenotype. The modified MenSCs served as an excellent local drug delivery system for tumor site-specific targeted delivery and demonstrated therapeutic efficacy in an animal xenografts tumor model of U-87 MG cells. The MenSC-stTRAIL cells induced antitumor effects in vitro by significantly increasing apoptosis (P < 0.05). It also significantly reduced tumor burden in vivo (P < 0.05). The results showed that the proliferation of tumor cells was significantly reduced (P < 0.05). The MenSC, as a cellular delivery vehicle has a wide potential therapeutic role, which includes the treatment of tumors.
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spelling pubmed-56016542017-09-21 Human menstrual blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells as a cellular vehicle for malignant glioma gene therapy Wang, Xiao-Jun Xiang, Bing-Yu Ding, Ya-Hui Chen, Lu Zou, Hai Mou, Xiao-Zhou Xiang, Charlie Oncotarget Research Paper Despite many advances in conventional treatment strategies, there is no effective treatment modality for malignant gliomas. Gene therapy may offer a promising option for gliomas and several gene therapy approaches have shown anti-tumor efficiency in previous studies. Mesenchymal stem cell-based gene therapies, in which stem cells are genetically engineered to express therapeutic molecules, have shown tremendous potential because of their innate homing ability. In this study, human menstrual blood-derived MSCs (MenSC), a novel type of multipotential MSCs displays tropism for human malignant glioma when used as a gene delivery vehicle for therapeutics. Secretable trimeric TRAIL (stTRAIL) contains the receptor-binding domain of TRAIL, a death ligand that induces apoptosis in tumor cells. To overexpress stTRAIL, MenSCs were infected with efficient adenoviral serotype 35 vectors that had no influence on its broad multipotency and low immunophenotype. The modified MenSCs served as an excellent local drug delivery system for tumor site-specific targeted delivery and demonstrated therapeutic efficacy in an animal xenografts tumor model of U-87 MG cells. The MenSC-stTRAIL cells induced antitumor effects in vitro by significantly increasing apoptosis (P < 0.05). It also significantly reduced tumor burden in vivo (P < 0.05). The results showed that the proliferation of tumor cells was significantly reduced (P < 0.05). The MenSC, as a cellular delivery vehicle has a wide potential therapeutic role, which includes the treatment of tumors. Impact Journals LLC 2017-05-04 /pmc/articles/PMC5601654/ /pubmed/28938558 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.17621 Text en Copyright: © 2017 Wang et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/) (CC BY 3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Wang, Xiao-Jun
Xiang, Bing-Yu
Ding, Ya-Hui
Chen, Lu
Zou, Hai
Mou, Xiao-Zhou
Xiang, Charlie
Human menstrual blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells as a cellular vehicle for malignant glioma gene therapy
title Human menstrual blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells as a cellular vehicle for malignant glioma gene therapy
title_full Human menstrual blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells as a cellular vehicle for malignant glioma gene therapy
title_fullStr Human menstrual blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells as a cellular vehicle for malignant glioma gene therapy
title_full_unstemmed Human menstrual blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells as a cellular vehicle for malignant glioma gene therapy
title_short Human menstrual blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells as a cellular vehicle for malignant glioma gene therapy
title_sort human menstrual blood-derived mesenchymal stem cells as a cellular vehicle for malignant glioma gene therapy
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5601654/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28938558
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.17621
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