Publication | Closed Access
Gene therapy targeted by radiation preferentially radiosensitizes tumor cells.
141
Citations
15
References
1994
Year
Radiation EffectsRadiation OncologyGene TherapiesRadiation MedicineRadiation TherapyTranscriptional RegulationEgr-tnf ConstructMedicineRadiation EffectImmunologyDna SequencesRadiation BiologyOncologyCell BiologyCancer ResearchTumor Biology
Transcriptional regulation of the promoter/enhancer region of the Egr-1 gene is activated by ionizing radiation. We linked DNA sequences from the promotor region of Egr-1 to a complementary DNA sequence which encodes human tumor necrosis factor (TNF) alpha, a radiosensitizing cytokine. The Egr-TNF construct was transfected into a human cell line of hematopoietic origin, HL525, which was used in an experimental animal system. HL525 (clone 2) cells containing the Egr-TNF construct which exhibits radiation induction of TNF-alpha were injected into human xenografts of the radioresistant human squamous cell carcinoma cell line SQ-20B. Animals treated with radiation and clone 2 demonstrated an increase in tumor cures compared with animals treated with radiation alone or unirradiated animals given injections of clone 2 alone. No increase in local or systemic toxicity was observed in the combined treatment group. The combination of gene therapy and radiation therapy enhances tumor cures without increasing normal tissue toxicity and is a new paradigm for cancer treatment.
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