We evaluated the ability of a short course of treatment with the ribonucleotide reductase (RR) inhibitor hydroxyurea (HU) and two novel RR inhibitors Trimidox (TX) and Didox (DX) to influence late-stage murine retrovirus-induced lymphoproliferative disease. LPBM5 murine leukaemia virus retrovirus-infected mice were treated daily with HU, TX or DX for 4 weeks, beginning 9 weeks post-infection, after development of immunodeficiency and lymphoproliferative disease. Drug effects on disease progression were determined by evaluating spleen weight and histology. Effects on haematopoiesis were determined by measuring peripheral blood indices (white blood cells and haematocrit) and assay of femur cellularity and femoral and splenic content of colony-forming units granulocyte-macrophage (CFU-GM) and burst-forming units-erythroid (BFU-E). HU, TX and DX partially reversed late-stage retrovirus-induced disease, resulting in spleen weights significantly below pre-treatment values. Spleen histology was also improved by RR inhibitor treatment (DX>TX>HU). However, as expected, HU was significantly myelosuppressive, inducing a reduction in peripheral indices associated with depletion of femoral CFU-GM and BFU-E. In contrast, although TX and DX were moderately myelosuppressive, both drugs were significantly better tolerated than HU. In summary, short-term treatment in late-stage murine retroviral disease with HU, TX or DX induced dramatic reversal of disease pathophysiology. However, the novel RR inhibitors TX and DX had more effective activity and significantly less bone marrow toxicity than HU.
Development of antineoplastic gene therapies is impaired by a paucity of transcription control elements with efficient, cancer cellspecific activity. We investigated the utility of promoter (AChP) and 5 0 -distal enhancer (ACE66) elements from the platelet-derived growth factor-A (PDGF-A) gene, which are hyperactive in many human cancers. Efficacy of these elements was tested in multiple tumor cell lines, both in cell culture and as tumor explants in athymic nude mice. Plasmid and viral vectors were constructed with the AChP promoter alone or in fusion with three copies of the ACE66 enhancer for expression of the prototype suicide gene, thymidine kinase (TK). ACE/AChP and AChP cassettes elicited ganciclovir (GCV)-induced cytotoxicity in multiple tumor cell lines. The ACE enhancer element also exhibited synergism with placental and liver-specific promoter elements. An adenovirus containing the AChP-TK cassette produced striking increases in GCV sensitivity in cultured tumor cell lines, as well as GCV-induced regression of U87 MG glioblastoma explants in vivo. TK expression was distributed throughout tumors receiving the therapeutic virus, whereas TdT-mediated dUTP nick end labeling (TUNEL) analysis revealed numerous regions undergoing apoptosis. Vascularization and reticulin fiber networks were less pronounced in virus-GCV-treated tumors, suggesting that both primary and stromal cell types may have been targeted. These studies provide proof-of-principle for utility of the PDGF-A promoter and ACE66 enhancer in antineoplastic gene therapy for a diverse group of human cancers.
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