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A recombinant defective adenoviral agent expressing anti-bcl-2 ribozyme promotes apoptosis of bcl-2-expressing human prostate cancer cells

โœ Scribed by Thambi Dorai; Harris Perlman; Kenneth Walsh; Ahmad Shabsigh; Erik T. Goluboff; Carl A. Olsson; Ralph Buttyan


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1999
Tongue
French
Weight
169 KB
Volume
82
Category
Article
ISSN
0020-7136

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โœฆ Synopsis


Over-expression of bcl-2, a potent anti-apoptosis protein, is likely to be one of the genetic mechanisms through which human prostate cancer cells develop resistance to hormonal and other forms of therapy. To develop a therapeutic agent for hormone-resistant prostate cancer based on suppression of bcl-2 expression, we had previously designed and synthesized a dual-hammerhead ribozyme capable of recognizing and specifically cleaving human bcl-2 mRNA in vitro as well as in vivo. To increase the efficiency by which the anti-bcl-2 ribozyme can be delivered to target cells, we have created a recombinant replication-deficient (defective) adenoviral agent capable of expressing the anti-bcl-2 ribozyme upon infection. This viral agent effectively reduces intracellular levels of bcl-2 mRNA and protein in cultured LNCaP prostate cancer cells following standard infection procedures. Likewise, the defective adenovirus-anti-bcl-2 ribozyme induces extensive apoptosis in several androgen-sensitive (LNCaP) and androgeninsensitive (LNCaP/bcl-2 and PC-3) human prostate cancer cell lines that express differing amounts of bcl-2 protein. One androgen-insensitive prostate cancer cell line, DU-145, lacking in bcl-2 expression, was found to be completely refractory to the effects of the virus ribozyme, supporting the concept that the cytotoxic effects of the ribozyme are based solely on its effects on bcl-2 expression. Our results support further development of this adenovirus/anti-bcl-2 ribozyme for potential gene therapeutic purposes in certain forms of hormoneresistant prostate cancer where over-expression of bcl-2 proto-oncogene is indicated. Int.


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In this study we evaluated the effect of over-expression of the bcl-2 gene, a potent apoptosis suppressor, on radiationinduced apoptotic cell death in 2 human prostate cancer cell lines, androgen-independent PC-3 cells and androgen-sensitive LNCaP cells. Cells were transfected with the bcl-2 gene an