These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.


PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS

Search MEDLINE/PubMed


  • Title: The use of cationic liposomes DC-CHOL/DOPE and DDAB/DOPE for direct transfer of Escherichia coli cytosine deaminase gene into growing melanoma tumors.
    Author: Szala S, Missol E, Sochanik A, Strozyk M.
    Journal: Gene Ther; 1996 Nov; 3(11):1026-31. PubMed ID: 9044744.
    Abstract:
    An attempt was made to use simple cationic liposomes DC-Chol/DOPE and DDAB/DOPE (DC-Chol is 3 beta (N(N',N-dimethylaminoethane) carbamoyl) cholesterol, DDAB is dimethyldioctadecyl ammonium bromide and DOPE is dioleoylphosphatidylethanolamine) for transfer of Escherichia coli cytosine deaminase 'suicide' gene under the control of tissue-specific tyrosinase gene promoter directly into the murine melanoma B16(F10) tumor. Several repeated intratumoral injections of DNA-liposome complexes followed by intraperitoneal administrations of 5-fluorocytosine, which is converted to 5-fluorouracil, caused strong retardation of murine melanoma B16(F10) tumor growth and, in some cases, rejection of the pre-established tumor. The inhibition of tumor growth expressed as the increased survival of mice is better seen in the case of using DNA-DDAB/DOPE complexes as compared to DNA-DC-Chol/DOPE ones. It seems that the observed therapeutic effect appears to result from several factors: 5-fluorouracil generation by transfected cells, liposome toxicity (DDAB is more toxic than DC-Chol and hence more tumor cells are killed), increased transfection efficiency of surviving cancer cells (in this case DDAB is a better transfection agent than DC-Chol) and, finally, the bystander effect which causes destruction of cells untransfected with CD gene by easily diffusible 5-fluorouracil.
    [Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]