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Mesenchymal stem cells as carriers and amplifiers in CRAd delivery to tumors

Authors :
Wei Junchen
Han Zhiqiang
Weng Yanjie
Li Kezhen
Cao Li
Wu Mingfu
Hu Wencheng
Wu Peng
Ma Quanfu
Xu Hongbin
You Lanying
Liao Shujie
Gao Qinglei
Fang Yong
Li Xiao
Chen Pingbo
Ji Teng
Xia Xi
Liu Ronghua
Wang Shixuan
Xu Gang
Wang Daowen
Zhou Jianfeng
Ma Ding
Source :
Molecular Cancer, Vol 10, Iss 1, p 134 (2011)
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
BMC, 2011.

Abstract

Abstract Background Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) have been considered to be the attractive vehicles for delivering therapeutic agents toward various tumor diseases. This study was to explore the distribution pattern, kinetic delivery of adenovirus, and therapeutic efficacy of the MSC loading of E1A mutant conditionally replicative adenovirus Adv-Stat3(-) which selectively replicated and expressed high levels of anti-sense Stat3 complementary DNA in breast cancer and melanoma cells. Methods We assessed the release ability of conditionally replicative adenovirus (CRAd) from MSC using crystal violet staining, TCID50 assay, and quantitative PCR. In vitro killing competence of MSCs carrying Adv-Stat3(-) toward breast cancer and melanoma was performed using co-culture system of transwell plates. We examined tumor tropism of MSC by Prussian blue staining and immunofluorescence. In vivo killing competence of MSCs carrying Adv-Stat3(-) toward breast tumor was analyzed by comparison of tumor volumes and survival periods. Results Adv-Stat3(-) amplified in MSCs and were released 4 days after infection. MSCs carrying Adv-Stat3(-) caused viral amplification, depletion of Stat3 and its downstream proteins, and led to significant apoptosis in breast cancer and melanoma cell lines. In vivo experiments confirmed the preferential localization of MSCs in the tumor periphery 24 hours after tail vein injection, and this localization was mainly detected in the tumor parenchyma after 72 hours. Intravenous injection of MSCs carrying Adv-Stat3(-) suppressed the Stat3 pathway, down-regulated Ki67 expression, and recruited CD11b-positive cells in the local tumor, inhibiting tumor growth and increasing the survival of tumor-bearing mice. Conclusions These results indicate that MSCs migrate to the tumor site in a time-dependent manner and could be an effective platform for the targeted delivery of CRAd and the amplification of tumor killing effects.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14764598
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Molecular Cancer
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2c48649915441d2ae599794b4a9f755
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1476-4598-10-134