Conventional photodynamic therapy (PDT) for cancer is limited by the insufficient efficacy and specificity of photosensitizers. We herein describe a highly effective and selective tumor-targeted PDT using a near-infrared (NIR) photosensitizer, IRDye700DX, conjugated to a human monoclonal antibody (Ab) specific for carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA). The antitumor effects of this Ab-assisted PDT, called photoimmunotherapy (PIT), were investigated in vitro and in vivo. The Ab-IRDye conjugate induced potent cytotoxicity against CEA-positive tumor cells after NIR-irradiation, whereas CEA-negative cells were not affected at all, even in the presence of excess photoimmunoconjugate. We found an equivalent phototoxicity and a predominant plasma membrane localization of Ab-IRDye after both one and six hours of incubation. Either no or little caspase activation and membrane peroxidation were observed in PIT-treated cells and a panel of scavengers for reactive oxygen species showed only partial inhibition of the phototoxic effect. Strikingly, Ab-IRDye retained significant phototoxicity even under hypoxia. We established a xenograft model, which allowed us to sensitively investigate the therapeutic efficacy of PIT by noninvasive bioluminescence imaging. Luciferase-expressing MKN-45-luc human gastric carcinoma cells were subcutaneously implanted into both flanks of nude mice. NIR-irradiation was performed for only the tumor on one side. In vivo imaging and measurement of the tumor size revealed that a single PIT treatment, with intraperitoneal administration of Ab-IRDye and subsequent NIR-irradiation, caused rapid cell death and significant inhibition of tumor growth, but only on the irradiated side. Together, these data suggest that Ab-IRDye-mediated PIT has great potential as an anticancer therapeutics targeting CEApositive tumors.
We developed a time-and cost-effective multiplex allele-specific polymerase chain reaction (AS-PCR) method based on the two-step PCR thermal cycles for genotyping single-nucleotide polymorphisms in three alcoholism-related genes: alcohol dehydrogenase 1B, aldehyde dehydrogenase 2 and μ-opioid receptor. Applying MightyAmp ® DNA polymerase with optimized AS-primers and PCR conditions enabled us to achieve effective and selective amplification of the target alleles from alkaline lysates of a human hair root, and simultaneously to determine the genotypes within less than 1.5 h using minimal lab equipment.
The molecular basis of the circadian clock is an autoregulatory feedback loop in which the PAS domain-containing protein PERIOD periodically inhibits its own transcription. In the present study on PERIOD of the silk moth Bombyx mori, we have cloned two distinct period mRNA homologues with different PAS domain sequences either with or without the pentapeptide GTQEK. A period cDNA fragment first amplified by PCR exhibited a 15 bp-deleted nucleotide sequence in the PAS domain, compared with the database sequence. A possible alternative splicing mechanism was examined by PCR analyses, and a 15 bp-inserted clone was also amplified. The entire sequences of these period alpha and period beta isoforms were then determined by the 3' and 5' RACE methods. Isoform period alpha consists of a 3,324 bp oligonucleotide encoding 1,108 amino acid residues, whereas isoform period beta comprises 3,309 bp corresponding to 1,103 amino acids. Isoforms period alpha and period beta were found to be exactly identical except for the 15 bp deletion/insertion site. Such a pair of isoforms with a deletion/insertion sequence, namely two splice variants, has previously been reported only for the PERIOD proteins of the two honeybees, Apis mellifera and A. cerana. The occurrence of an alternative splicing mechanism in the B. mori period gene was hypothesized based on the genome structure recently clarified. Bombyx mori PERIOD alpha and beta proteins are the isomers that reveal firstly the different PAS domain sequences.
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