In Vivo Gene Transfer with Retroviral Vector-Producer Cells for Treatment of Experimental Brain Tumors

Kenneth W. Culver(National Institutes of Health), Zvi Ram(National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke), Stuart Wallbridge(National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke), Hiroyuki Ishii(National Institutes of Health), Edward H. Oldfield(National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke), R. Michael Blaese(National Institutes of Health)
Science
June 12, 1992
Cited by 1,525

Abstract

Direct in situ introduction of exogenous genes into proliferating tumors could provide an effective therapeutic approach for treatment of localized tumors. Rats with a cerebral glioma were given an intratumoral stereotaxic injection of murine fibroblasts that were producing a retroviral vector in which the herpes simplex thymidine kinase (HS-tk) gene had been inserted. After 5 days during which the HS-tk retroviral vectors that were produced in situ transduced the neighboring proliferating glioma cells, the rats were treated with the anti-herpes drug ganciclovir. Gliomas in the ganciclovir- and vector-treated rats regressed completely both macroscopically and microscopically. This technique exploits what was previously considered to be a disadvantage of retroviral vectors--that is, their inability to transfer genes into nondividing cells. Instead, this feature of retroviruses is used to target gene delivery to dividing tumor cells and to spare nondividing neural tissue.


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