Antiangiogenic Gene Therapy for Cancer via Systemic Administration of Adenoviral Vectors Expressing Secretable Endostatin

2000 
A growing number of antiangiogenesis strategies have been investigated for the treatment of cancer and other angiogenesis-dependent diseases. One of the most promising strategies is to systemically administer one or more antiangiogenic proteins frequently enough to achieve a sufficient long-term steady state level of the protein(s) to achieve the maximum beneficial effect. However, the utility of this strategy is limited because of many technical difficulties, including obtaining both the quantity and quality of the protein(s) necessary for optimal therapeutic benefit. To overcome these difficulties, we hypothesized that a single administration of a replication-defective adenoviral vector expressing a secretable antiangiogenic protein could achieve an optimal long-term systemic concentration. We constructed a recombinant adenoviral vector, Av3mEndo, which encodes a secretable form of murine endostatin. We demonstrated secretion of endostatin from several cell lines transduced with Av3mEndo. Partially puri...
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