Adenovirus-mediated mGM-CSF in vivo Gene Transfer Inhibits Tumor Growth in a Murine Meth A Fibrosarcoma Model
Adenovirus-mediated mGM-CSF in vivo Gene Transfer Inhibits Tumor Growth in a Murine Meth A Fibrosarcoma Model
- 대한바이러스학회
- The Journal of Korean Society of Virology
- Vol.30 No.2
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2000.01141 - 150 (10 pages)
- 0
The effectiveness of noninfectious recombinant adenovirus encoding murine granulocyte-macrophage colony stimulating factor (mGM-CSF) for the treatment of Meth A fibrosarcoma was investigated in syngeneic BALB/C model. Meth A and HeLa cells transduced with the recombinant adenovirus (Ad.mGM-CSF) produced substantial amounts of mGM-CSF, while WEH1164 cells transduced with the virus did not produce mGM-CSF. Mice inoculated subcutaneously with $1{\times}10^6$ Meth A cells, followed by injection of Ad.dE1 as a control, developed large tumors that reached a mean tumor size of 22 mm by day 30. However, tumor development and tumorigenicity were significantly inhibited in mice with a single intratumoral injection of Ad.mGM-CSF at $1{\times}10^8\;pfu$. Histological examination of the tumors injected with Ad.mGM-CSF revealed dense infiltrates of neutrophils, histiocytes, lymphocytes, and eosinophils associated with apoptotic cell death. The results suggest that the recombinant adenovirus encoding GM-CSF have a potential use for cancer gene therapy.
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