Treatment of Rat Bladder Cancer With Electrochemotherapy In Vivo

Author(s):  
Yoko Kubota ◽  
Teruhiro Nakada ◽  
Isoji Sasagawa
Keyword(s):  
2019 ◽  
Vol 23 (07n08) ◽  
pp. 813-820
Author(s):  
Odrun A. Gederaas ◽  
Harald Husebye ◽  
Anders Johnsson ◽  
Susan Callaghan ◽  
Anders Brunsvik

Aminolevulinic acid and hexyl-aminolevulinate serve as biological precursors to produce photosensitive porphyrins in cells via the heme biosynthetic pathway. This pathway is integral to porphyrin-based photodynamic diagnosis and therapy. By adding exogenous hexyl-aminolevulinate to rat bladder cancer cells (AY27, in vitro) and an animal bladder cancer model (in vivo), fluorescent endogenous porphyrin production was stimulated. Lipophilic protoporphyrin IX was identified as the dominant species by reverse high-pressure liquid chromatography. Subcellular porphyrin localization in the AY27 cells was evaluated by confocal laser scanning microscopy and showed almost quantitative bleaching after 20 s. From this study, we ascertained that the protocol described herein is suitable for hexyl-aminolevulinate-mediated photodynamic therapy and diagnosis when protoporphyrin IX is the active agent.


2021 ◽  
pp. 302-309
Author(s):  
Odrun A. Gederaas ◽  
Harald Husebye ◽  
Anders Johnsson ◽  
Susan Callaghan ◽  
Anders Brunsvik

2020 ◽  
pp. 1-12
Author(s):  
Maroeska J. Burggraaf ◽  
Lisette Waanders ◽  
Mariska Verlaan ◽  
Janneke Maaskant ◽  
Diane Houben ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND: Bladder cancer is the ninth most common cancer in men. 70% of these tumors are classified as non-muscle invasive bladder cancer and those patients receive 6 intravesical instillations with Mycobacterium bovis BCG after transurethral resection. However, 30% of patients show recurrences after treatment and experience severe side effects that often lead to therapy discontinuation. Recently, another vaccine strain, Salmonella enterica typhi Ty21a, demonstrated promising antitumor activity in vivo. Here we focus on increasing bacterial retention in the bladder in order to reduce the number of instillations required and improve antitumor activity. OBJECTIVE: To increase the binding of Ty21a to the bladder wall by surface labeling of the bacteria with adhesion protein FimH and to study its effect in a bladder cancer mouse model. METHODS: Binding of Ty21a with surface-labeled FimH to the bladder wall was analyzed in vitro and in vivo. The antitumor effect of a single instillation of Ty21a+FimH in treatment was determined in a survival experiment. RESULTS: FimH-labeled Ty21a showed significant (p <  0.0001) improved binding to mouse and human cell lines in vitro. Furthermore, FimH labeled bacteria showed ∼5x more binding to the bladder than controls in vivo. Enhanced binding to the bladder via FimH labeling induced a modest improvement in median but not in overall mice survival. CONCLUSIONS: FimH labeling of Ty21a significantly improved binding to bladder tumor cells in vitro and the bladder wall in vivo. The improved binding leads to a modest increase in median survival in a single bladder cancer mouse study.


Oncogene ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qiuxia Yan ◽  
Peng Zeng ◽  
Xiuqin Zhou ◽  
Xiaoying Zhao ◽  
Runqiang Chen ◽  
...  

AbstractThe prognosis for patients with metastatic bladder cancer (BCa) is poor, and it is not improved by current treatments. RNA-binding motif protein X-linked (RBMX) are involved in the regulation of the malignant progression of various tumors. However, the role of RBMX in BCa tumorigenicity and progression remains unclear. In this study, we found that RBMX was significantly downregulated in BCa tissues, especially in muscle-invasive BCa tissues. RBMX expression was negatively correlated with tumor stage, histological grade and poor patient prognosis. Functional assays demonstrated that RBMX inhibited BCa cell proliferation, colony formation, migration, and invasion in vitro and suppressed tumor growth and metastasis in vivo. Mechanistic investigations revealed that hnRNP A1 was an RBMX-binding protein. RBMX competitively inhibited the combination of the RGG motif in hnRNP A1 and the sequences flanking PKM exon 9, leading to the formation of lower PKM2 and higher PKM1 levels, which attenuated the tumorigenicity and progression of BCa. Moreover, RBMX inhibited aerobic glycolysis through hnRNP A1-dependent PKM alternative splicing and counteracted the PKM2 overexpression-induced aggressive phenotype of the BCa cells. In conclusion, our findings indicate that RBMX suppresses BCa tumorigenicity and progression via an hnRNP A1-mediated PKM alternative splicing mechanism. RBMX may serve as a novel prognostic biomarker for clinical intervention in BCa.


Phytomedicine ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 64 ◽  
pp. 153069 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seung-Shick Shin ◽  
Yu-Jin Park ◽  
Byungdoo Hwang ◽  
Sung Lyea Park ◽  
Sang-Wook Han ◽  
...  

2010 ◽  
Vol 82 (14) ◽  
pp. 5993-5999 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald O. P. Draga ◽  
Matthijs C. M. Grimbergen ◽  
Peter L. M. Vijverberg ◽  
Christiaan F. P. van Swol ◽  
Trudy G. N. Jonges ◽  
...  

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