PDT-induced in vitro bystander effect

Author(s):  
David Olivier ◽  
Samuel Douilard ◽  
Thierry Patrice
Keyword(s):  
2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 289-296
Author(s):  
Yuriy Khodarovich ◽  
Darya Rakhmaninova ◽  
German Kagarlitskiy ◽  
Anastasia Baryshnikova ◽  
Sergey Deyev

Background:: One of the approaches to cancer gene therapy relies on tumor transfection with DNA encoding toxins under the control of tumor-specific promoters. Methods:: Here, we used DNA plasmids encoding very potent anti-ERBB2 targeted toxin, driven by the human telomerase promoter or by the ubiquitous CAG promoter (pTERT-ETA and pCAG-ETA) and linear polyethylenimine to target cancer cells. Results:: We showed that the selectivity of cancer cell killing by the pTERT-ETA plasmid is highly dependent upon the method of preparation of DNA-polyethylenimine complexes. After adjustment of complex preparation protocol, cell lines with high activity of telomerase promoter can be selectively killed by transfection with the pTERT-ETA plasmid. We also showed that cells transfected with pTERT-ETA and pCAG-ETA plasmids do not exert any detectable bystander effect in vitro. Conclusion:: Despite this, three intratumoral injections of a plasmid-polyethylenimine complex resulted in substantial growth retardation of a poorly transfectable D2F2/E2 tumor in mice. There were no significant differences in anti-tumor properties between DNA constructs with telomerase or CAG promoters in vivo.


Dose-Response ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 155932581775006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carmel Mothersill ◽  
Richard Smith ◽  
Jiaxi Wang ◽  
Andrej Rusin ◽  
Cris Fernandez-Palomo ◽  
...  

The phenomenon by which irradiated organisms including cells in vitro communicate with unirradiated neighbors is well established in biology as the radiation-induced bystander effect (RIBE). Generally, the purpose of this communication is thought to be protective and adaptive, reflecting a highly conserved evolutionary mechanism enabling rapid adjustment to stressors in the environment. Stressors known to induce the effect were recently shown to include chemicals and even pathological agents. The mechanism is unknown but our group has evidence that physical signals such as biophotons acting on cellular photoreceptors may be implicated. This raises the question of whether quantum biological processes may occur as have been demonstrated in plant photosynthesis. To test this hypothesis, we decided to see whether any form of entanglement was operational in the system. Fish from 2 completely separate locations were allowed to meet for 2 hours either before or after which fish from 1 location only (group A fish) were irradiated. The results confirm RIBE signal production in both skin and gill of fish, meeting both before and after irradiation of group A fish. The proteomic analysis revealed that direct irradiation resulted in pro-tumorigenic proteomic responses in rainbow trout. However, communication from these irradiated fish, both before and after they had been exposed to a 0.5 Gy X-ray dose, resulted in largely beneficial proteomic responses in completely nonirradiated trout. The results suggest that some form of anticipation of a stressor may occur leading to a preconditioning effect or temporally displaced awareness after the fish become entangled.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Francisca Espinoza ◽  
Rocio Magdalena ◽  
Natalia Saldivia ◽  
Nery Jara ◽  
Fernando Martínez ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: The reduced form of vitamin C, ascorbic acid (AA), has been related to antioxidant defense as well as gene expression and cell differentiation in the cerebral cortex. In neurons, AA is mainly oxidized to dehydroascorbic acid (DHA); however, DHA cannot accumulate intracellularly because it induces metabolic changes and cell death. In this context, it has been proposed that vitamin C recycling via neuron-astrocyte coupling maintains AA levels and prevents DHA parenchymal accumulation. To date, the role of this mechanism during the outgrowth of neurites is unknown.Methods: To stimulate neuronal differentiation, adhered neurospheres treated with AA and retinoic acid (RA) were used. Neuritic growth was analyzed by confocal microscopy, and the effect of vitamin C recycling (bystander effect) in vitro was studied using different cells (astrocytes, HL60 and U87). Reactive oxygen species (ROS) generation was also analyzed by flow cytometry and protein carbonylation / carboximetil-lysine production.Results: AA stimulates neuritic growth more efficiently than RA. However, AA is oxidized to DHA in long incubation periods, generating a loss in the formation of neurites. Surprisingly, neurite growth is maintained over time following co-incubation of neurospheres with cells (HL60, U87, or astrocytes) that efficiently capture DHA (Bystander effect). In this sense, astrocytes have high capacity to recycle DHA and stimulate the maintenance of neurites. Finally, our data indicate that DHA induces ROS generation, a condition that results in protein carbonylation and carboximetil-lysine production. Conclusions: We have demonstrated that vitamin C recycling in vitro regulates the morphology of immature neurons during the differentiation and maturation processes.


BMC Cancer ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianhua Zhang ◽  
Yuanbo Liu ◽  
Mengqing Zang ◽  
Shan Zhu ◽  
Bo Chen ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Free flap-mediated gene therapy in the tumor bed following surgical resection is a promising approach in cancer targeted treatment of residual disease. We investigated the selective killing efficacy of a lentivirus-mediated cytosine deaminase-thymidine kinase (CDglyTK) gene in transplanted breast cancer delivered into a free flap by intra-artery perfusion. Methods Proliferation, apoptosis, and cell cycle of rat SHZ-88 breast cancer cells transfected with a lentivirus-mediated CD/TK gene were measured following treatment with ganciclovir and 5-flucytosine in vitro. A model of residual disease of breast cancer in a rat superficial inferior epigastric artery (SIEA) flap model was used to study the therapeutic potential of a double suicide CD/TK and prodrug system in vivo. Results Killing efficacy of the double suicide CD/TK and prodrug system on SHZ-88 cells was mediated by increased apoptosis and cell cycle arrest at the G1 phase with significant bystander effect. Following recombinant lentivirus transfection of rat SIEA flap by intra-artery perfusion, CD/TK gene expression was limited to the flap, and the volume and weight of transplanted tumors were significantly reduced without observable toxicity. Conclusions SIEA flaps transfected with a lentivirus-mediated CDglyTK gene by intra-artery perfusion effectively suppress transplanted breast tumor growth without obvious systemic toxic effects in rats.


2009 ◽  
Vol 282 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-47 ◽  
Author(s):  
Toshiaki Tanaka ◽  
Agnès Duflot-Dancer ◽  
Michèle Tiraby ◽  
Colette Piccoli ◽  
Gérard Tiraby ◽  
...  

1996 ◽  
Vol 84 (5) ◽  
pp. 839-845 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nobusada Shinoura ◽  
Lin Chen ◽  
Maqsood A. Wani ◽  
Young Gyu Kim ◽  
Jeffrey J. Larson ◽  
...  

✓ 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.


Author(s):  
M. Pilinska ◽  
◽  
O. Shemetun ◽  
O. Talan ◽  
O. Dibska ◽  
...  

Objective. to determine the impact of the irradiated in vitro blood cells from patients with B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) on the level of chromosomal instability in peripheral blood lymphocytes (PBL) from healthy persons during the development of tumor-induced bystander effect. Materials and methods. Separate and joint cultivation of PBL from healthy persons (cells-bystanders) together with blood cells from CLL patients irradiated in vitro at the G0 stage of the mitotic cycle by γ-quanta 137Cs in a dose of 0.5 Gy 137Cs (cells-inductors) was used. For joint cultivation our own model system for co-cultivation of PBL from individuals of different sex, designed by us to investigate the bystander effects at the cytogenetic level was used. Traditional cytogenetic analysis of uniformly painted chromosomes with group karyotyping was performed. The frequency of chromosome aberrations in cells-inductors and cells-bystanders as the markers of chromosome instability were determined. Results. Found that at co-cultivation of PBL from healthy individuals with irradiated blood cells from CLL patients the middle group frequency of chromosome aberrations in the bystander cells (5.18 ± 0.51 per 100 metaphases, p < 0.001) was statistically significant higher than its background level determined at a separate cultivaton (1.52 ± 0.30 per 100 metaphases), and at co-cultivation with non-irradiated blood cells from CLL patients (3.31 ± 0.50 per 100 metaphases, p < 0.01). Conclusions. Co-cultivation of in vitro irradiated blood cells from CLL patients with PBL from healthy persons leads to an increase in the level of chromosome instability in the bystander cells due to synergism between tumor-induced and radiation-induced bystander effects. Key words: human peripheral blood lymphocytes, B-cell chronic lymphocytic leukemia, ionizing radiation, chromosomal instability, tumor-induced bystander effect.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Jasmine Chan-Hyams

<p>Gene-directed enzyme-prodrug therapy (GDEPT) employs tumour-tropic vectors including viruses (VDEPT) and bacteria (BDEPT) to deliver a genetically-encoded prodrug-converting enzyme to the tumour environment, thereby sensitising the tumour to a prodrug. Bacterial nitroreductases, which are able to activate a range of anti-cancer nitroaromatic prodrugs to genotoxic metabolites, are of particular interest for GDEPT.  The bystander effect is crucial to the success of GDEPT. The bystander effect is a measure of how efficiently activated prodrug metabolites are transferred from gene-expressing cells to neighbouring tissues. This promotes more extensive tumour cell killing. The bystander effect has been quantified for multiple nitroaromatic prodrugs in mixed multilayer human cell cultures. Although this is a good model for VDEPT it cannot simulate the ability of these prodrug metabolites to exit the bacterial vectors relevant to BDEPT. Prior to this work there was an unmet need for an in vitro method of quantifying the bystander effect as it occurs in BDEPT, i.e. a bacterial model of cell-to-cell transfer of activated prodrug metabolites.  This thesis presents a method for measuring the bacterial bystander effect in vitro in a microplate based assay that was validated by flow cytometry. In this assay two Escherichia coli strains are grown in co-culture; an activator strain expressing the nitroreductase E. coli nfsA and a recipient strain containing an SOS-GFP DNA damage responsive gene construct. In this system, induction of GFP by reduced prodrug metabolites can only occur following their transfer from the activators to the recipients.  Using this method, the bacterial bystander effect of the clinically relevant prodrugs, metronidazole, CB1954, nitro-CBI-DEI, PR-104A and SN27686, was assessed. Consistent with the bystander efficiencies in human cell multilayers, reduced metronidazole exhibited little bacterial cell-to-cell transfer, whereas nitro-CBI-DEI was passed very efficiently from activator to recipient cells post-reduction. In contrast with observations in human cell multilayers, the PR-104A and SN27686 metabolites were not effectively passed between the two bacterial strains, whereas reduced CB1954 was transferred efficiently. Using nitroreductase enzymes that exhibit different biases for the 2- versus 4-nitro substituents of CB1954, I further showed that the 2-nitro reduction products exhibit substantially higher levels of bacterial cell-to-cell transfer than the 4-nitro reduction products. The outcomes of this investigation highlighted the importance of evaluating enzyme-prodrug combinations in models relevant to the intended GDEPT vector, as there can evidently be profound differences in efficacy in different settings. These findings motivated an investigation into the influence of the bystander effect on certain screening strategies used for directed evolution of nitroreductases. It was observed that the bacterial bystander effect can occur during fluorescence activated cell sorting (FACS) of a nitroreductase variant library and negatively impact the recovery of more active variants. Significantly fewer nfsA-expressing cells were recovered from FACS when using CB1954 and nitro-CBI-DEI, when the bystander effect was given time to occur, as compared to controls in which the bystander effect was given no time to occur. In contrast, at the preferred challenge concentrations the mustard prodrugs PR-104A and SN27686 did not yield significantly lower proportions of nfsA-expressing cells under bystander condition.  A subsequent investigation compared the evolutionary outcomes arising from screening a nitroreductase variant library using FACS, in which the bystander effect can occur, in parallel to a manual pre-selection method of individual clones for detoxification of structurally divergent nitroaromatic antibiotics. Overall the results of this investigation were inconclusive after just a single round of selection, but there is some evidence that the FACS strategy was more effective than niclosamide/chloramphenicol pre-selection in enriching for superior CB1954-reducing variants.  Finally, a panel of nitroreductase candidates was evaluated with the next generation prodrugs PR-104A and SN36506 for possible Clostridia-DEPT development. It was found that the Vibrio vulnificus NfsB F70A/F108Y variant displayed the highest catalytic efficiency with PR-104A reported thus far compared to any other nitroreductase, and was the only NfsB family nitroreductase to exhibit any activity with SN36506 at the purified protein level. At the time this research was performed only NfsB family nitroreductases had been successfully expressed in C. sporogenes by our collaborators, hence the V. vulnificus NfsB F70A/F108Y variant was selected as a promising lead enzyme for further development.</p>


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