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1.
Front Oncol ; 9: 1097, 2019.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31781480

ABSTRACT

Purpose: Carboplatin is used to treat many cancers, but occurrence of drug resistance and its high toxicity remain a clinical hurdle limiting its efficacy. We compared the efficacy and toxicity of DNA repair inhibitors olaparib or AsiDNA administered alone or in combination with carboplatin. Olaparib acts by inhibiting PARP-dependent repair pathways whereas AsiDNA inhibits double-strand break repair by preventing recruitment of enzymes involved in homologous recombination and non-homologous end joining. Experimental Design: Mice with MDA-MB-231 tumors were treated with carboplatin or/and olaparib or AsiDNA for three treatment cycles. Survival and tumor growth were monitored. Toxicities of treatments were assayed in C57BL/6 immunocompetent mice. Circulating blood hematocrits, bone marrow cells, and organs were analyzed 10 and 21 days after end of treatment using flow cytometry and microscopy analysis. Resistance occurrence was monitored after cycles of treatments with combination of AsiDNA and carboplatin in independent BC227 cell cultures. Results: Olaparib or AsiDNA monotherapies decreased tumor growth and increased mean survival of grafted animals. The combination with carboplatin further increased survival. Carboplatin toxicity resulted in a decrease of most blood cells, platelets, thymus, and spleen lymphocytes. Olaparib or AsiDNA monotherapies had no toxicity, and their combination with carboplatin did not increase toxicity in the bone marrow or thrombocytopenia. All animals receiving carboplatin combined with olaparib developed high liver toxicity with acute hepatitis at 21 days. In vitro, carboplatin resistance occurs after three cycles of treatment in all six tested cultures, whereas only one became resistant (1/5) after five cycles when carboplatin was associated to low doses of AsiDNA. All selected carboplatin-resistant clones retain sensitivity to AsiDNA. Conclusion: DNA repair inhibitor treatments are efficient in the platinum resistant model, MDA-MB-231. The combination with carboplatin improves survival. The association of carboplatin with olaparib is associated with high liver toxicity, which is not observed with AsiDNA. AsiDNA could delay resistance to carboplatin without increasing its toxicity.

2.
Mol Cancer Ther ; 16(12): 2817-2827, 2017 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28947503

ABSTRACT

Hematologic malignancies are rare cancers that develop refractory disease upon patient relapse, resulting in decreased life expectancy and quality of life. DNA repair inhibitors are a promising strategy to treat cancer but are limited by their hematologic toxicity in combination with conventional chemotherapies. Dbait are large molecules targeting the signaling of DNA damage and inhibiting all the double-strand DNA break pathways. Dbait have been shown to sensitize resistant solid tumors to radiotherapy and platinum salts. Here, we analyze the efficacy and lack of toxicity of AsiDNA, a cholesterol form of Dbait, in hematologic malignancies. We show that AsiDNA enters cells via LDL receptors and activates its molecular target, the DNA dependent protein kinase (DNA-PKcs) in 10 lymphoma and leukemia cell lines (Jurkat-E6.1, MT-4, MOLT-4, 174xCEM.T2, Sup-T1, HuT-78, Raji, IM-9, THP-1, and U-937) and in normal primary human PBMCs, resting or activated T cells, and CD34+ progenitors. The treatment with AsiDNA induced necrotic and mitotic cell death in most cancer cell lines and had no effect on blood or bone marrow cells, including immune activation, proliferation, or differentiation. Sensitivity to AsiDNA was independent of p53 status. Survival to combined treatment with conventional therapies (etoposide, cyclophosphamides, vincristine, or radiotherapy) was analyzed by isobolograms and combination index. AsiDNA synergized with all treatments, except vincristine, without increasing their toxicity to normal blood cells. AsiDNA is a novel, potent, and wide-range drug with the potential to specifically increase DNA-damaging treatment toxicity in tumor without adding toxicity in normal hematologic cells or inducing immune dysregulation. Mol Cancer Ther; 16(12); 2817-27. ©2017 AACR.


Subject(s)
DNA Repair/drug effects , Hematologic Neoplasms/blood , Hematologic Neoplasms/genetics , Cell Line, Tumor , DNA Repair/genetics , Hematologic Neoplasms/metabolism , Humans , Signal Transduction
3.
Clin Cancer Res ; 23(4): 1001-1011, 2017 Feb 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27559053

ABSTRACT

Purpose: Cancer treatments using tumor defects in DNA repair pathways have shown promising results but are restricted to small subpopulations of patients. The most advanced drugs in this field are PARP inhibitors (PARPi), which trigger synthetic lethality in tumors with homologous recombination (HR) deficiency. Using AsiDNA, an inhibitor of HR and nonhomologous end joining, together with PARPi should allow bypassing the genetic restriction for PARPi efficacy.Experimental Design: We characterized the DNA repair inhibition activity of PARPi (olaparib) and AsiDNA by monitoring repair foci formation and DNA damage. We analyzed the cell survival to standalone and combined treatments of 21 tumor cells and three nontumor cells. In 12 breast cancer (BC) cell lines, correlation with sensitivity to each drug and transcriptome were statistically analyzed to identify resistance pathways.Results: Molecular analyses demonstrate that olaparib and AsiDNA respectively prevent recruitment of XRCC1 and RAD51/53BP1 repair enzymes to damage sites. Combination of both drugs increases the accumulation of unrepaired damage resulting in an increase of cell death in all tumor cells. In contrast, nontumor cells do not show an increase of DNA damage nor lethality. Analysis of multilevel omics data from BC cells highlighted different DNA repair and cell-cycle molecular profiles associated with resistance to AsiDNA or olaparib, rationalizing combined treatment. Treatment synergy was also confirmed with six other PARPi in development.Conclusions: Our results highlight the therapeutic interest of combining AsiDNA and PARPi to recapitulate synthetic lethality in all tumors independently of their HR status. Clin Cancer Res; 23(4); 1001-11. ©2016 AACR.


Subject(s)
Neoplasms/drug therapy , Phthalazines/administration & dosage , Piperazines/administration & dosage , Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerase Inhibitors/administration & dosage , Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerases/genetics , Cell Line, Tumor , DNA End-Joining Repair/drug effects , Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic/drug effects , Homologous Recombination/genetics , Humans , Neoplasms/genetics , Neoplasms/pathology , Phthalazines/adverse effects , Piperazines/adverse effects , Poly(ADP-ribose) Polymerase Inhibitors/adverse effects , Rad51 Recombinase/genetics , Synthetic Lethal Mutations/drug effects , Tumor Suppressor p53-Binding Protein 1/genetics , X-ray Repair Cross Complementing Protein 1/genetics
4.
Hum Gene Ther ; 22(3): 343-56, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21043787

ABSTRACT

From the perspective of a pilot clinical gene therapy trial for Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS), we implemented a process to produce a lentiviral vector under good manufacturing practices (GMP). The process is based on the transient transfection of 293T cells in Cell Factory stacks, scaled up to harvest 50 liters of viral stock per batch, followed by purification of the vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein-pseudotyped particles through several membrane-based and chromatographic steps. The process leads to a 200-fold volume concentration and an approximately 3-log reduction in protein and DNA contaminants. An average yield of 13% of infectious particles was obtained in six full-scale preparations. The final product contained low levels of contaminants such as simian virus 40 large T antigen or E1A sequences originating from producer cells. Titers as high as 2 × 10(9) infectious particles per milliliter were obtained, generating up to 6 × 10(11) infectious particles per batch. The purified WAS vector was biologically active, efficiently expressing the genetic insert in WAS protein-deficient B cell lines and transducing CD34(+) cells. The vector introduced 0.3-1 vector copy per cell on average in CD34(+) cells when used at the concentration of 10(8) infectious particles per milliliter, which is comparable to preclinical preparations. There was no evidence of cellular toxicity. These results show the implementation of large-scale GMP production, purification, and control of advanced HIV-1-derived lentiviral technology. Results obtained with the WAS vector provide the initial manufacturing and quality control benchmarking that should be helpful to further development and clinical applications.


Subject(s)
Genetic Therapy , Genetic Vectors/biosynthesis , Genetic Vectors/genetics , Industrial Microbiology/methods , Lentivirus/genetics , Cell Culture Techniques , Cell Line , Drug Contamination/legislation & jurisprudence , Drug Contamination/prevention & control , Gene Expression Regulation , Gene Order , Genetic Vectors/physiology , HEK293 Cells , Hematopoietic Stem Cells/metabolism , Humans , Lentivirus/physiology , Plasmids/genetics , Proviruses/genetics , Quality Control , Transduction, Genetic , Transgenes/genetics , Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome/therapy
5.
J Gene Med ; 6(4): 374-86, 2004 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15079812

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: T-cells expressing the HSV1-TK suicide gene can be used for the control of graft-versus-host disease following allogeneic stem cell transplantation. To develop clinical trials based on such a strategy, we have generated under good manufacturing procedures a novel 'split genome' human packaging cell line (1704 cells). METHODS: To minimize the risk of generating replication-competent retroviruses, pol was truncated to remove sequences overlapping with env. To improve retroviral infection and selection of transduced T-cells, high titers of GALV-pseudotyped retroviral particles harboring a bicistronic Thy1-IRES-TK vector coding for the CD90 GPI-anchored membrane molecule were produced by 1704 cells. RESULTS: Using 1704 cell supernatant and an optimized transduction protocol, approximately 50% of primary T-cells were transduced and could then be purified (approximately 95%) using clinical-grade immunomagnetic beads directed against CD90. Over 96% of these OKT3/IL-2-activated CD90(+)-selected T-cells were killed by ganciclovir. Cell proliferation and cytokine production of transduced T-cells and HLA-restricted cytotoxicity of transduced T-cell clones were identical to those of their non-transduced counterparts cultured under the same conditions. CONCLUSIONS: GALV-pseudotyped retroviral particles harboring a bicistronic Thy1-IRES-TK vector allow efficient transduction and rapid selection of human T-cells under conditions applicable for clinical trials using the new human 1704 packaging cell line.


Subject(s)
Retroviridae/genetics , T-Lymphocytes/physiology , Thy-1 Antigens/genetics , Thymidine Kinase/genetics , Transduction, Genetic/methods , Base Sequence , Cell Line , Cells, Cultured , Ganciclovir/pharmacology , Genetic Vectors , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , T-Lymphocytes/drug effects , Virus Cultivation/methods
6.
Blood ; 100(12): 3942-9, 2002 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12393742

ABSTRACT

Patients with mutations of either RAG-1 or RAG-2 genes suffer from severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) characterized by the lack of T and B lymphocytes. The only curative treatment today consists of hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplantation, which is only partially successful in the absence of an HLA genoidentical donor, thus justifying research to find an alternative therapeutic approach. To this end, RAG-2-deficient mice were used to test whether retrovirally mediated ex vivo gene transfer into HSCs could provide long-term correction of the immunologic deficiency. Murine RAG-2-/-Sca-1(+) selected bone marrow cells were transduced with a modified Moloney leukemia virus (MLV)-based MND (myeloproliferative sarcoma virus enhancer, negative control region deleted, dl587rev primer-binding site substituted) retroviral vector containing the RAG-2 cDNA and transplanted into RAG-2-/- sublethally irradiated mice (3Gy). Two months later, T- and B-cell development was achieved in all mice. Diverse repertoire of T cells as well as proliferative capacity in the presence of mitogens, allogeneic cells, and keyhole limpet hemocyanin (KLH) were shown. B-cell function as shown by serum Ig levels and antibody response to a challenge by KLH also developed. Lymphoid subsets and function were shown to be stable over a one-year period without evidence of any detectable toxicity. Noteworthy, a selective advantage for transduced lymphoid cells was evidenced by comparative provirus quantification in lymphoid and myeloid lineages. Altogether, this study demonstrates the efficiency of ex vivo RAG-2 gene transfer in HSCs to correct the immune deficiency of RAG-2-/- mice, constituting a significant step toward clinical application.


Subject(s)
DNA-Binding Proteins/administration & dosage , Genetic Therapy/methods , Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/therapy , Animals , B-Lymphocytes/cytology , B-Lymphocytes/immunology , Bone Marrow Cells/metabolism , Bone Marrow Transplantation , Cell Division , Cell Lineage , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Female , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C3H , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell , Retroviridae/genetics , T-Lymphocytes/cytology , T-Lymphocytes/immunology , Transduction, Genetic , Virus Integration
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