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Protection of hematopoietic cells from O6-alkylation damage by O6-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase gene transfer: studies with different O6-alkylating agents and retroviral backbones.
- Source :
- European Journal of Haematology; Jul2001, Vol. 67 Issue 1, p2-13, 12p, 1 Diagram, 5 Charts, 1 Graph
- Publication Year :
- 2001
-
Abstract
- Abstract: Overexpression of O<superscript>6</superscript>-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) can protect hematopoietic cells from O<superscript>6</superscript>-alkylation damage. To identify possible clinical applications of this technology we compared the effect of MGMT gene transfer on the hematotoxicity induced by different O<superscript>6</superscript>-alkylating agents in clinical use: the chloroethylnitrosoureas ACNU, BCNU, CCNU and the tetrazine derivative temozolomide. In addition, various retroviral vectors expressing the MGMT-cDNA were investigated to identify optimal viral backbones for hematoprotection by MGMT expression. Protection from ACNU, BCNU, CCNU or temozolomide toxicity was evaluated utilizing a Moloney murine leukemia virus-based retroviral vector (N2/Zip-PGK-MGMT) to transduce primary murine bone marrow cells. Increased resistance in murine colony-forming units (CFU) was demonstrated for all four drugs. In comparison to mock-transduced controls, after transduction with N2/Zip-PGK-MGMT the IC<subscript>50</subscript> for CFU increased on average 4.7-fold for ACNU, 2.5-fold for BCNU, 6.3-fold for CCNU and 1.5-fold for temozolomide. To study the effect of the retroviral backbone on hematoprotection various vectors expressing the human MGMT-cDNA from a murine embryonic sarcoma virus LTR (MSCV-MGMT) or a hybrid spleen focus-forming/murine embryonic sarcoma virus LTR (SF1-MGMT) were compared with the N2/Zip-PGK-MGMT vector. While all vectors increased resistance of transduced human CFU to ACNU, the SF1-MGMT construct was most efficient especially at high ACNU concentrations (8–12 µg/ml). Similar results were obtained for protection of murine high-proliferative-potential colony-forming cells. These data may help to optimize treatment design and retroviral constructs in future clinical studies aiming at hematoprotection by MGMT gene transfer. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- GENETIC transformation
HEMATOPOIETIC growth factors
ALKYLATION
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 09024441
- Volume :
- 67
- Issue :
- 1
- Database :
- Complementary Index
- Journal :
- European Journal of Haematology
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 5089151
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1034/j.1600-0609.2001.067001002.x