• DocumentCode
    1652408
  • Title

    Adenovirus-Mediated FasL gEne Transfer Into Human Gastric Carcinoma

  • Author

    Li, De-chun ; Zheng, Shi-Ying ; Zhao, Jun ; Ge, Jin-Feng

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Gen. Surg., First Affiliated Hosp. of Suzhou Univ., Suzhou
  • fYear
    2008
  • Firstpage
    415
  • Lastpage
    422
  • Abstract
    Evaluate the possible value of FasL in gastric cancer gene therapy by investigating the effects of FasL expression on human gastric cancer cell line.An adenoviral vector encoding the full-length human FasL cDNA was constructed and used to infect a human gastric cancer (SGC-7901) cell line. FasL expression was confirmed by X-gal staining, flow cytometric analysis and RT-PCR. The effect of FasL on cell proliferation was determined by clonogenic assay, cytotoxicity was detected by MTT assay, and cell viability was measured by trypan blue exclusion. The therapeutic efficiency of Ad-FasL in in vivo was investigated with a xenograft tumor model in nude mice.SGC-7901 cells infected with Ad-FasL showed increased expression of FasL, resulting in significantly decreased cell growth and colony-forming activity when compared with control adenovirus-infected cells. The cytotoxicity of anti-Fas antibody (CH-11) in gastric cancer cells was stronger than that of ActD (91plusmn8 vs 60plusmn5, P<0.01), and the cytotoxicity of Ad-FasL was stronger than that of CH-11 (60plusmn5 vs 50plusmn2, P<0.05). In addition, G1-phase arrest (67.75plusmn0.39 vs 58.03plusmn2.16, P<0.05) and apoptosis were observed in Ad-FasL-infected SGC-7901 cells, and the growth of SGC-7901 xenografts in nude mice was retarded after intra-tumoral injection with Ad-FasL (54% vs 0%, P<0.0001).Infection of human gastric carcinoma cells with Ad-FasL induces apoptosis, indicating that this target gene might be of potential value in gene therapy for gastric cancer.
  • Keywords
    DNA; cancer; cellular biophysics; genetics; microorganisms; molecular biophysics; patient treatment; FasL expression; RT-PCR; SGC-7901 cell line; adenoviral vector encoding; adenovirus-mediated FasL gene transfer; cell proliferation; cell viability; cytotoxicity; flow cytometric analysis; gene therapy; human FasL cDNA; human gastric carcinoma; trypan blue exclusion; Birth disorders; Cancer; Cells (biology); Gene therapy; Hospitals; Humans; Immune system; Neoplasms; Oncological surgery; Tumors;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Bioinformatics and Biomedical Engineering, 2008. ICBBE 2008. The 2nd International Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Shanghai
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-1747-6
  • Electronic_ISBN
    978-1-4244-1748-3
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/ICBBE.2008.104
  • Filename
    4534984