Yamashita Motoyuki, Rosser Charles J, Zhou Jain-Hua, Zhang Xin-Qiao, Connor Robert J, Engler Heidrun, Maneval Daniel C, Karashima Takashi, Czerniak Bogdan A, Dinney Colin P N, Benedict William F
Department of Genitourinary Medical Oncology, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston 77030, USA.
Cancer Gene Ther. 2002 Aug;9(8):687-91. doi: 10.1038/sj.cgt.7700488.
Using our model to grow superficial human bladder cancer in the mouse bladder, we have found that the polyamide compound, Syn3, when injected intravesically for 1 hour at 1 mg/mL on two consecutive days, markedly increases rAd-beta-gal intravesical gene transfer and expression. This enhanced transgene expression was much greater than obtain by the use of 22% ethanol, which had previously been shown to increase intravesical adenoviral gene transfer, whereas little or no gene expression was seen with exposure to only rAd-beta-gal. beta-Galactosidase staining was seen in virtually every normal urothelial and superficial tumor cell present, including tumors that express little or no coxsackie-adenovirus receptors when Syn3 was present. High adenoviral-mediated gene transfer was also documented in the pig bladder using Syn3 in a similar protocol. Therefore, Syn3 may overcome the limitations of adequate intravesical adenoviral-mediated gene transfer and, when combined with an appropriate adenoviral-mediated gene, could offer an effective approach to the treatment of superficial bladder cancer and perhaps even genetically altered precursor lesions.