S

Saw See Hong

Kunsan National University

ORCID: 0000-0001-8871-0901

Publishes on Virus-based gene therapy research, Viral Infectious Diseases and Gene Expression in Insects, CAR-T cell therapy research. 47 papers and 2.1k citations.

47Publications
2.1kTotal Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Canine Adenovirus Type 2 Attachment and Internalization: Coxsackievirus-Adenovirus Receptor, Alternative Receptors, and an RGD-Independent Pathway
Claire Soudais, Sylvie Boutin, Saw See Hong et al.|Journal of Virology|2000
Cited by 120Open Access

The best-characterized receptors for adenoviruses (Ads) are the coxsackievirus-Ad receptor (CAR) and integrins alpha(v)beta(5) and alpha(v)beta(3), which facilitate entry. The alpha(v) integrins recognize an Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) motif found in some extracellular matrix proteins and in the penton base in most human Ads. Using a canine adenovirus type 2 (CAV-2) vector, we found that CHO cells that express CAR but not wild-type CHO cells are susceptible to CAV-2 transduction. Cells expressing alpha(M)beta(2) integrins or major histocompatibility complex class I (MHC-I) molecules but which do not express CAR were not transduced. Binding assays showed that CAV-2 attaches to a recombinant soluble form of CAR and that Ad type 5 (Ad5) fiber, penton base, and an anti-CAR antibody partially blocked attachment. Using fluorescently labeled CAV-2 particles, we found that in some cells nonpermissive for transduction, inhibition was at the point of internalization and not attachment. The transduction efficiency of CAV-2, which lacks an RGD motif, surprisingly mimicked that of Ad5 when tested in cells selectively expressing alpha(v)beta(5) and alpha(v)beta(3) integrins. Our results demonstrate that CAV-2 transduction is augmented by CAR and possibly by alpha(v)beta(5), though transduction can be CAR and alpha(v)beta(3/5) independent but is alpha(M)beta(2), MHC-I, and RGD independent, demonstrating a transduction mechanism which is distinct from that of Ad2/5.

Genetic Retargeting of Adenovirus: Novel Strategy Employing “Deknobbing” of the Fiber
Maria K. Magnusson, Saw See Hong, Pierre Boulanger et al.|Journal of Virology|2001
Cited by 114

For efficient and versatile use of adenovirus (Ad) as an in vivo gene therapy vector, modulation of the viral tropism is highly desirable. In this study, a novel method to genetically alter the Ad fiber tropism is described. The knob and the last 15 shaft repeats of the fiber gene were deleted and replaced with an external trimerization motif and a new cell-binding ligand, in this case the integrin-binding motif RGD. The corresponding recombinant fiber retained the basic biological functions of the natural fiber, i.e., trimerization, nuclear import, penton formation, and ligand binding. The recombinant fiber bound to integrins but failed to react with antiknob antibody. For virus production, the recombinant fiber gene was rescued into the Ad genome at the exact position of the wild-type (WT) fiber to make use of the native regulation of fiber expression. The recombinant virus Ad5/FibR7-RGD yielded plaques on 293 cells, but the spread through the monolayer was two to three times delayed compared to WT, and the ratio of infectious to physical particles was 20 times lower. Studies on virus tropism showed that Ad5/FibR7-RGD was able to infect cells which did not express the coxsackie-adenovirus receptor (CAR), but did express integrins. Ad5/FibR7-RGD virus infectivity was unchanged in the presence of antiknob antibody, which neutralized the WT virus. Ad5/FibR7-RGD virus showed an expanded tropism, which is useful when gene transfer to cells not expressing CAR is needed. The described method should also make possible the construction of Ad genetically retargeted via ligands other than RGD.

Integrin alpha5 in human breast cancer is a mediator of bone metastasis and a therapeutic target for the treatment of osteolytic lesions
Cited by 99Open Access

Bone metastasis remains a major cause of mortality and morbidity in breast cancer. Therefore, there is an urgent need to better select high-risk patients in order to adapt patient's treatment and prevent bone recurrence. Here, we found that integrin alpha5 (ITGA5) was highly expressed in bone metastases, compared to lung, liver, or brain metastases. High ITGA5 expression in primary tumors correlated with the presence of disseminated tumor cells in bone marrow aspirates from early stage breast cancer patients (n = 268; p = 0.039). ITGA5 was also predictive of poor bone metastasis-free survival in two separate clinical data sets (n = 855, HR = 1.36, p = 0.018 and n = 427, HR = 1.62, p = 0.024). This prognostic value remained significant in multivariate analysis (p = 0.028). Experimentally, ITGA5 silencing impaired tumor cell adhesion to fibronectin, migration, and survival. ITGA5 silencing also reduced tumor cell colonization of the bone marrow and formation of osteolytic lesions in vivo. Conversely, ITGA5 overexpression promoted bone metastasis. Pharmacological inhibition of ITGA5 with humanized monoclonal antibody M200 (volociximab) recapitulated inhibitory effects of ITGA5 silencing on tumor cell functions in vitro and tumor cell colonization of the bone marrow in vivo. M200 also markedly reduced tumor outgrowth in experimental models of bone metastasis or tumorigenesis, and blunted cancer-associated bone destruction. ITGA5 was not only expressed by tumor cells but also osteoclasts. In this respect, M200 decreased human osteoclast-mediated bone resorption in vitro. Overall, this study identifies ITGA5 as a mediator of breast-to-bone metastasis and raises the possibility that volociximab/M200 could be repurposed for the treatment of ITGA5-positive breast cancer patients with bone metastases.

Identification of Adenovirus (Ad) Penton Base Neutralizing Epitopes by Use of Sera from Patients Who Had Received Conditionally Replicative Ad (Ad <i>dl</i> 1520) for Treatment of Liver Tumors
Saw See Hong, Nagy Habib, Laure Franqueville et al.|Journal of Virology|2003
Cited by 83Open Access

Sera from 17 patients with primary and secondary liver tumors who had been administered oncolytic adenovirus (Ad) mutant Addl1520 were analyzed for anti-Ad neutralization titers and antibodies to the Ad major capsid proteins hexon, penton base (Pb), and fiber. The antibodies recognized mainly conformational epitopes in hexon and both linear and conformational epitopes in Pb and fiber. Pb-specific antibodies were isolated from serum samples that had been obtained prior to and during the course of the treatment of four of these patients. We found that the Pb antibodies had a significant contribution toward anti-Ad neutralization, and this mainly occurred at the step of virus internalization. The Pb antigenic epitopes were determined by phage biopanning and were mapped to 10 discrete regions, which made up three major immunodominant domains within residues 51 to 120, 193 to 230, and 311 to 408, respectively. One of these domains (residues 311 to 408) overlapped the highly conserved, integrin-binding RGD (Arg-Gly-Asp) motif. The contribution of antibodies directed to RGD and other epitopes in Ad neutralization activity was determined indirectly by using a phage-mediated depletion assay. Our results suggested that circulating RGD antibodies were not prevalent and were poorly neutralizing and that other peptide motifs within residues 51 to 60, 216 to 226, and 311 to 408 in Pb sequence represented major target sites for neutralizing antibodies.