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Wan Li Bi

Publishes on Virus-based gene therapy research, Herpesvirus Infections and Treatments, Cytomegalovirus and herpesvirus research. 2 papers and 525 citations.

2Publications
525Total Citations

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<i>In Vitro</i> Evidence That Metabolic Cooperation Is Responsible for the Bystander Effect Observed with HSV <i>tk</i> Retroviral Gene Therapy
Wan Li Bi, Linda M. Parysek, Ronald E. Warnick et al.|Human Gene Therapy|1993
Cited by 420

Tumor cells transduced with a retroviral vector expressing a herpes virus thymidine kinase (HSV tk) gene are rendered sensitive to the antiherpetic drug, ganciclovir. The bystander effect refers to the observation that not all cells need be transduced to eradicate the cell population by treatment with ganciclovir. We demonstrate that metabolic cooperation can account for this bystander effect. When HT1080 human fibrosarcoma cells marked with a lacZ gene (LZ+5) were cocultured with HT1080 cells transduced with a retrovirus expressing HSVtk (HT1080tk11), at a density at which the majority of cells were in contact, both HT1080tk11 and LZ+5 cells were killed by ganciclovir. When cells were cocultured at a low density where the majority of cells are not in contact with one another, however, only the HT1080tk11 cells were killed. This result suggests that cell contact with HT1080tk11 cells is necessary to render the HSVtk– LZ+5 cells sensitive to ganciclovir. Because involvement of metabolic cooperation in the killing of the LZ+5 cells would require not only contact between HT1080tk11 and LZ+5 cells but also the capacity to transfer small cytotoxic molecules from the former cell to the latter, transfer of radioactive molecules between the two cell lines was assessed by autoradiography after treatment of a coculture with [3H]ganciclovir. Isolated HT1080tk11 cells incorporated the labeled ganciclovir into their nuclei, whereas isolated LZ+5 cells did not. LZ+5 cells incorporated [3H]ganciclovir, only when in contact with HT1080tk11 cells. These findings indicate that a ganciclovir metabolic product, presumably a phosphorylated form, can pass from HSV tk+ to HSV tk– cells and mediate cytotoxicity as a consequence of direct contact. The use of retroviral vectors expressing the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (HSV tk) gene has an intrinsic significant advantage as a strategy for gene therapy of tumours. Not all cells of a tumor need to be infected to render the tumor sensitive of the antiherpetic drug, ganciclovir. The conferral of ganciclovir sensitivity to uninfected cells has been designated as the "bystander effect." This paper explores the possibility that metabolic cooperation plays a major role in the manifestation of this phenomenon. Metabolic cooperation involves the transfer of low-molecular-weight molecules (< 1,000) between adjacent cells via gap junctions. During ganciclovir treatment, phosphorylated ganciclovir derived from HSV tk+ cells can be transferred to adjacent HSV tk– cells and cause the death of these uninfected cells.

Protein and messenger RNA expression of connexin43 in astrocytomas: implications in brain tumor gene therapy
Nobusada Shinoura, Lin Chen, Maqsood A. Wani et al.|Journal of neurosurgery|1996
Cited by 105

The expression of connexin43, the primary gap-junction constituent of glial cells, was evaluated at the messenger RNA and protein levels in different grades of astrocytoma to investigate the relevance of gap junctions in herpes simplex virus-thymidine kinase (HSV-tk)-mediated gene therapy of brain tumors. Transduction of the retroviral-mediated HSV-tk gene into tumor cells with subsequent administration of ganciclovir has recently been used as an experimental therapeutic strategy for treatment of brain tumors. One aspect of this approach is the bystander effect, which augments the efficacy of this therapeutic approach. Glioblastoma cells with minimum levels of connexin43 protein were transfected with a connexin43 complementary DNA. These cells manifested a marked increase in the in vitro bystander effect, supporting the contention that the in vitro bystander effect is a consequence of metabolic cooperation between cells mediated by gap junctions. To assess relative levels of gap-junction protein expression in the relevant tumor type, we examined primary astrocytomas, primary astrocytoma cell cultures, and glioblastoma cell lines. Although most astrocytoma tumor samples expressed connexin43, they differed in the level of expression, with the greatest variation exhibited in high-grade astrocytomas. Primary glioblastoma cell cultures and established glioblastoma cell lines also displayed some variability in connexin43 levels. In aggregate, our results anticipate that glioblastomas will have a varied bystander effect during HSV-tk gene therapy depending on the level of connexin43 expression.