Abstract
Specifically targeted expression of a toxin gene potentially represents a novel approach to cancer therapy. With a view to the ablation of B-cell malignancies, we have constructed a plasmid, designated pTHA71, which expresses the A-chain of diphtheria toxin (DT-A) with high efficiency and specificity in transfected, mature B-lymphoid cells. The construction incorporated immunoglobulin (Ig) kappa light chain gene regulatory sequences, including a kappa promoter, small intron, partial constant region exon, and 3'-flanking sequence (but lacking a known enhancer). These sequences conferred substantially more efficient expression of DT-A in mature B-cells than was seen from constructs that included only Ig promoters and enhancers. When transfected into the 70Z/3 murine pre-B-cell line, pTHA71 was only expressed efficiently if the cells were induced to express their endogenous, rearranged Ig kappa gene by prior exposure to lipopolysaccharide. The insertion of the enhancer from the Ig kappa large intron into pTHA71, generating pTHA81, did not markedly influence the level of DT-A expression in 70Z/3 cells. The observed absence of expression in pre-B-cells suggests that DT-A constructs similar to pTHA71 might be used for the therapeutic ablation of malignant B-cells of mature stages, while sparing normal progenitor cells.
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