Kuga T, Sakamaki S, Matsunaga T, Hirayama Y, Kuroda H, Takahashi Y, Kusakabe T, Kato I, Niitsu Y
4th Department of Internal Medicine, Sapporo Medical University School of Medicine, Japan.
Hum Gene Ther. 1997 Nov 1;8(16):1901-10. doi: 10.1089/hum.1997.8.16-1901.
To protect bone marrow cells from the toxicity of chemotherapy, a multidrug resistant gene or a dihydrofolate reductase gene has been introduced into stem cells. These genes, however, are not capable of conferring refractoriness to alkylating agents (AA), which are some of the most commonly used agents in chemotherapy regimens. In the present study, an attempt was made to endow human stem cell (CD34+ cells) with resistance to cyclophosphamide, a well-known AA, and adriamycin (ADM) by transducing the glutathione-S-transferase pi (GST-pi) gene whose product is thought to detoxify AA by conjugating them with glutathione and to remove a toxic peroxide formed by ADM. The gene transduction was carried out retrovirally with a virus titer of 1 x 10(5) FFU/ml, employing a recombinant fibronectin fragment; transduction efficiency was extremely low without the fragment. Incubation with interleukin-6 and stem cell factor enhanced the expression of fibronectin ligands VLA4 and VLA5 on CD34+ cells. This enhanced expression of VLA4 and VLA5 was considered to facilitate a close contact of the CD34+ cell to the retroviral vector via fibronectin fragments and the subsequent transduction process. The GST-pi gene-transduced CD34+ cells formed almost 3- and 2.5-fold more CFU-GM than neo gene-transduced CD34+ cells in the presence of 2.5 microg/ml of 4-hydroperoxycyclophosphamide (4-HC), an active form of cyclophosphamide, and 30 ng/ml ADM, respectively. The transfectants formed an appreciable number of colonies, even at higher concentrations of these drugs (5.0 microg/ml of 4-HC, 50 ng/ml of ADM) whereas neo gene-transduced or nontransduced CD34+ cells formed no colonies at all, indicating the possibility of selecting out the transfectants by exposing them to these anticancer drugs. Thus, we were able to demonstrate that transduction of the GST-pi gene confers resistance to cyclophosphamide as well as to ADM, and therefore this approach can be applied clinically for high-dose chemotherapy.
为保护骨髓细胞免受化疗毒性影响,已将多药耐药基因或二氢叶酸还原酶基因导入干细胞。然而,这些基因无法使细胞对烷化剂(AA)产生耐药性,而烷化剂是化疗方案中最常用的药物之一。在本研究中,尝试通过转导谷胱甘肽-S-转移酶π(GST-π)基因,赋予人干细胞(CD34+细胞)对环磷酰胺(一种知名的烷化剂)和阿霉素(ADM)的耐药性。其产物被认为可通过将烷化剂与谷胱甘肽结合来使其解毒,并清除由阿霉素形成的有毒过氧化物。基因转导通过逆转录病毒进行,病毒滴度为1×10⁵ FFU/ml,使用重组纤连蛋白片段;没有该片段时转导效率极低。用白细胞介素-6和干细胞因子孵育可增强CD34+细胞上纤连蛋白配体VLA4和VLA5的表达。VLA4和VLA5的这种增强表达被认为有助于CD34+细胞通过纤连蛋白片段与逆转录病毒载体紧密接触以及随后的转导过程。在存在2.5μg/ml的4-氢过氧环磷酰胺(4-HC,环磷酰胺的活性形式)和30 ng/ml阿霉素的情况下,转导了GST-π基因的CD34+细胞形成的CFU-GM分别比转导新霉素基因的CD34+细胞多近3倍和2.5倍。即使在这些药物的更高浓度(5.0μg/ml的4-HC,50 ng/ml的阿霉素)下,转染细胞也形成了相当数量的集落,而转导新霉素基因或未转导的CD34+细胞根本不形成集落,这表明通过将转染细胞暴露于这些抗癌药物来筛选出转染细胞的可能性。因此,我们能够证明转导GST-π基因可赋予对环磷酰胺以及阿霉素的耐药性,因此这种方法可临床应用于大剂量化疗。