Molecular Imaging Program at Stanford, Stanford University, Stanford, California, United States of America ; Department of Radiology, Stanford University, Stanford, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2013 Aug 28;8(8):e73138. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0073138. eCollection 2013.
Reporter gene (RG) imaging of cell-based therapies provides a direct readout of therapeutic efficacy by assessing the fate of implanted cells. To permit long-term cellular imaging, RGs are traditionally required to be integrated into the cellular genome. This poses a potential safety risk and regulatory bottleneck for clinical translation as integration can lead to cellular transformation. To address this issue, we have developed non-integrative, replicating minicircles (MCs) as an alternative platform for safer monitoring of cells in living subjects. We developed both plasmids and minicircles containing the scaffold/matrix attachment regions (S/MAR) of the human interferon-beta gene, driven by the CMV promoter, and expressing the bioluminescence RG firefly luciferase. Constructs were transfected into breast cancer cells, and expanded S/MAR minicircle clones showed luciferase signal for greater than 3 months in culture and minicircles remained as episomes. Importantly, luciferase activity in clonal populations was slowly lost over time and this corresponded to a loss of episome, providing a way to reversibly label cells. To monitor cell proliferation in vivo, 1.5 × 10(6) cells carrying the S/MAR minicircle were implanted subcutaneously into mice (n = 5) and as tumors developed significantly more bioluminescence signal was noted at day 35 and 43 compared to day 7 post-implant (p<0.05). To our knowledge, this is the first work examining the use of episomal, self-limited, replicating minicircles to track the proliferation of cells using non-invasive imaging in living subjects. Continued development of S/MAR minicircles will provide a broadly applicable vector platform amenable with any of the numerous RG technologies available to allow therapeutic cell fate to be assessed in individual patients, and to achieve this without the need to manipulate the cell's genome so that safety concerns are minimized. This will lead to safe tools to assess treatment response at earlier time points and improve the precision of cell-based therapies.
报告基因(RG)成像的细胞疗法通过评估植入细胞的命运提供了治疗效果的直接读出。为了允许长期细胞成像,传统上需要将 RG 整合到细胞基因组中。这为临床转化带来了潜在的安全风险和监管瓶颈,因为整合可能导致细胞转化。为了解决这个问题,我们开发了非整合、复制的微小环(MC)作为在活体动物中更安全地监测细胞的替代平台。我们开发了含有人干扰素-β基因支架/基质附着区(S/MAR)的质粒和微小环,由 CMV 启动子驱动,表达生物发光 RG 萤火虫荧光素酶。将构建体转染到乳腺癌细胞中,并且扩展的 S/MAR 微小环克隆在培养中显示出大于 3 个月的荧光素酶信号,并且微小环仍然作为附加体。重要的是,克隆群体中的荧光素酶活性随时间缓慢丢失,这与附加体的丢失相对应,提供了一种可逆标记细胞的方法。为了监测体内细胞增殖,将携带 S/MAR 微小环的 1.5×10(6)个细胞植入皮下(n=5),随着肿瘤的发展,在第 35 天和第 43 天与植入后第 7 天相比,观察到明显更多的生物发光信号(p<0.05)。据我们所知,这是第一项使用非整合、自我限制、复制微小环来跟踪活体动物中细胞增殖的工作,使用非侵入性成像。S/MAR 微小环的进一步开发将提供一个广泛适用的载体平台,适用于许多可用的 RG 技术之一,以允许在个体患者中评估治疗细胞命运,并在不需要操纵细胞基因组的情况下实现这一点,从而最大限度地减少安全问题。这将导致安全的工具来更早地评估治疗反应,并提高细胞疗法的精度。