Abstract

BackgroundNoninvasive and tissue-specific technologies of gene transfection would be valuable in clinical gene therapy. This present study was designed to determine whether it could enhance gene transfection in vivo by the combination of ultrasound-targeted microbubble destruction (UTMD) with polyethylenimine (PEI) in tumor xenografts, and illuminate the effects of gene silencing and apoptosis induction with short hairpin RNA (shRNA) interference therapy targeting human survivin by this novel technique.MethodsTwo different expression vectors (pCMV-LUC and pSIREN) were incubated with PEI to prepare cationic complexes (PEI/DNA) and confirmed by the gel retardation assay. Human cervical carcinoma (Hela) tumors were planted subcutaneously in both flanks of nude mice. Tumor-bearing mice were administered by tail vein with PBS, plasmid, plasmid and SonoVue microbubble, PEI/DNA and SonoVue microbubble. One tumor was exposed to ultrasound irradiation, while the other served as control. The feasibility of targeted delivery and tissue specificity facilitated by UTMD and PEI were investigated. Moreover, immunohistochemistry analyses about gene silencing and apoptosis induction were detected.ResultsElectrophoresis experiment revealed that PEI could condense DNA efficiently. The application of UTMD significantly increases the tissue transfection. Both expression vectors showed that gene expressions were present in all sections of tumors that received ultrasound exposure but not in control tumors. More importantly, the increases in transgene expression were related to UTMD with the presence of PEI significantly. Silencing of the survivin gene could induce apoptosis effectively by downregulating survivin and bcl-2 expression, also cause up-regulation of bax and caspase-3 expression.ConclusionsThis noninvasive, novel combination of UTMD with PEI could enhance targeted gene delivery and gene expression in tumor xenografts at intravenous administration effectively without causing any apparently adverse effect, and might be a promising candidate for gene therapy. Silencing of survivin gene expression with shRNA could be facilitated by this non-viral technique, and lead to significant cell apoptosis.

Highlights

  • Gene therapy holds great promise for the treatment of cancer diseases

  • When ultrasound-targeted microbubble destruction (UTMD) was combined with cationic polymers or liposome, the gene transfection efficiency had been markedly improved [4,11,13,14,15,16]

  • When N/P ≥ 3, the plasmid DNA migration could not be Histopathology Serial sections of tumor tissue were processed for routine histological examination

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Summary

Introduction

Gene therapy holds great promise for the treatment of cancer diseases. Successful gene therapy requires safe and efficient delivery systems [1]. Nonviral delivery systems are safe and easy to apply, but suffer from low transfection efficiency and transient gene expression [3] Methods such as cationic polymers could enhance the gene transfection in vitro [1], the results of in vivo studies were still not so satisfactory because targeting vectors have to overcome chemical and structural barriers to reach cells [4]. Noninvasive and tissue-specific technologies of gene transfection would be valuable in clinical gene therapy This present study was designed to determine whether it could enhance gene transfection in vivo by the combination of ultrasound-targeted microbubble destruction (UTMD) with polyethylenimine (PEI) in tumor xenografts, and illuminate the effects of gene silencing and apoptosis induction with short hairpin RNA (shRNA) interference therapy targeting human survivin by this novel technique

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