Abstract

Solid tumours account for 90% of all cancers. Gene therapy represents a potential new modality for their treatment. Up to now, several approaches have been developed, but the most efficient ones are the viral vector based gene therapy systems. However, viral vectors suffer from several deficiencies: firstly most vectors currently in use require intratumoural injection to elicit an effect. This is far from ideal as many tumours are inaccessible and many may have already spread to other parts of the body, making them difficult to locate and inject gene therapy vectors into. Second, because of cell heterogeneity within a given cancer, the vectors do not efficiently enter and kill every cancer cell. Third, hypoxia, a prevalent characteristic feature of most solid tumours, reduces the ability of the viral vectors to function and decreases viral gene expression and production. Consequently, a proportion of the tumour is left unaffected, from which tumour regrowth occurs. Thus, cancer gene therapy has yet to realise its full potential.The facultative or obligate anaerobic bacteria have been shown to selectively colonise and regerminate in solid tumours when delivered systemically. Among them, the clostridial spores were easy to produce, stable to store and safe to use as well as having extensive oncolytic ability. However, research in animals and humans has shown that oncolysis was almost always interrupted sharply at the outer rim of the viable tumour tissue where the blood supply was sufficient. These clostridial spores, though, could serve as "Trojan horse" for cancer gene therapy. Indeed, various spores harbouring genes for cancerstatic factors, prodrug enzymes, or proteins or cytokines had endowed with additional tumour-killing capability. Furthermore, combination of these "Trojan horses" with conventional chemotherapy or radiation therapies often significantly perform better, resulting in the "cure" of solid tumours in a high percentage of animals.It is, thus, not too difficult to predict the potential outcomes for the use of clostridial spores as "Trojan horse" vectors for oncolytic therapy when compared with viral vector-mediated cancer therapy for it be replication-deficient or competent. However, to move the "Trojan horse" to a clinic, though, additional requirements need to be satisfied (i) target tumours only and not anywhere else, and (ii) be able to completely kill primary tumours as well as metastases. Current technologies are in place to achieve these goals.

Highlights

  • Gene therapy represents a potential new modality for the treatment of cancer and it is developing with a very fast pace [1]

  • This review briefly describes the viral vectors, including the replication defective vectors, the targeted vectors and replication-competent oncolytic vectors, and their use in cancer gene therapy as well as their advantages and disadvantages

  • We have developed a bovine lentiviral vector system based on the Jembrana Disease virus (JDV) [20,21]

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Summary

Background

Gene therapy represents a potential new modality for the treatment of cancer and it is developing with a very fast pace [1]. Clostridial spores target and deliver therapeutic genes to tumours It is obvious that a major step towards the development of an effective cancer therapy will be to construct a vector that targets the tumour alone, and is capable of spreading to and throughout the tumour found in tissues. (2) "Thriving on" the unique tumour microenvironment The biological properties of virus-based vectors, in particular the ability to enter and replicate (in the case of replication-competent viral vectors) within a tumour cell and spread from cell to cell are highly relevant for effective cancer therapy. Hypoxia is an important feature of solid tumours and the ability of viruses to enter and replicate in hypoxic cells may be a critical determinant for the success or failure of viral vector-mediated cancer gene therapy. For clostridia size limitations are far less restricted, because the plasmids used can harbour much larger DNA fragments, but in case the foreign gene is integrated in the host chromosome there is unlimited capacity for insertion of therapeutic genes, forecasting the promising future for the development of ever powerful vectors

Conclusion
Seth P
Clark WH
23. Peng ZH: Current Status of Gendicine in China
26. Flotte TR: Gene Therapy Progress and Prospects
Findings
67. Hay JG
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