1. Antitumoral effects of defective herpes simplex virus-mediated transfer of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-2 gene in malignant glioma U87 in vitro: Consequences for anti-cancer gene therapy.
- Author
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Hoshi, Michio, Harada, Asako, Kawase, Takeshi, Uyemura, Keiichi, and Yazaki, Takahito
- Subjects
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CANCER treatment , *GLIOMA treatment , *GENE therapy , *GENETIC transformation , *METALLOPROTEINASES - Abstract
We set up experiments to evaluate the effects of defective herpes simplex virus (HSV)-mediated in vitro gene transfer of tissue inhibitor of metalloproteinases-2 (TIMP-2) in malignant glioma cells. Intrinsic TIMPs are known to be inhibitors of the strong invasive activities of matrix metalloproteinases in malignant gliomas. The defective HSV vectors dvSRaTIMP2 was engineered to express human TIMP-2 (hTIMP-2) with a combination of replication-competent HSV mutant, temperature-sensitive HSV-tsK, and amplicon plasmid-containing hTIMP-2. The hTIMP-2 gene was driven by the simian virus 40 promoter. The helper virus (HSV-tsK) was thermosensitive; consequently, this vector could proliferate only at 31.5°C. After infection of U87 human glioblastoma cells with the vector in vitro, expression of TIMP-2 was confirmed by reverse zymography. The U87 cells infected in vitro either with dvSRaTIMP2 or HSV-tsK were efficiently destroyed under replication-permissive conditions (at 31.5°C) and significantly lowered under replication-nonpermissive conditions (at 37°C). The invasive activity of U87 was clearly inhibited by dvSRaTIMP2 infection at both 31.5°C and 37°C. Our studies suggest that TIMP-2 expressing the defective HSV vector is possibly useful for the treatment of malignant brain tumors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2000
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