In Vivo Gene Therapy with p53 or p21 Adenovirus for Prostate Cancer

JA Eastham, SJ Hall, I Sehgal, J Wang, TL Timme… - Cancer research, 1995 - AACR
JA Eastham, SJ Hall, I Sehgal, J Wang, TL Timme, G Yang, L Connell-Crowley, SJ Elledge
Cancer research, 1995AACR
We introduced the gene for wild-type human p53 or p21, a critical downstream mediator of
p53-induced growth suppression, into a p53-deficient mouse prostate cancer cell line using
a recombinant adenoviral vector (Ad5CMV-p53 or Ad5CMV-p21). Elevated levels of
endogenous mouse p21 mRNA provided evidence for the functional activity of virally
transduced p53. Functional activity of viral-transduced p21 was demonstrated through
immunoprecipitation of cellular protein extracts, which showed that the viral-transduced p21 …
Abstract
We introduced the gene for wild-type human p53 or p21, a critical downstream mediator of p53-induced growth suppression, into a p53-deficient mouse prostate cancer cell line using a recombinant adenoviral vector (Ad5CMV-p53 or Ad5CMV-p21). Elevated levels of endogenous mouse p21 mRNA provided evidence for the functional activity of virally transduced p53. Functional activity of viral-transduced p21 was demonstrated through immunoprecipitation of cellular protein extracts, which showed that the viral-transduced p21 associates with cyclin-dependent kinase 2 and was sufficient to down-regulate the activity of the cyclin-dependent kinase by approximately 65%. In vitro growth assays revealed significantly higher growth suppression after Ad5CMV-p21 infection compared to Ad5CMV-p53. In vivo studies in syngeneic male mice with established s.c. prostate tumors demonstrated that the rate of growth and final tumor volume were reduced to a much greater extent in mice that received intratumor injection of Ad5CMV-p21 compared to Ad5CMV-p53. In addition, the survival of host animals bearing tumors that were infected with Ad5CMV-p21, but not Ad5CMV-p53, was significantly extended. These data suggest that Ad5CMV-p21 may be effective as a therapeutic agent for prostate cancer.
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