4.5 Article

Growth inhibition of colorectal carcinoma by lentiviral TRAIL-transgenic human mesenchymal stem cells requires their substantial intratumoral presence

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR MEDICINE
Volume 14, Issue 9, Pages 2292-2304

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1582-4934.2009.00794.x

Keywords

MSC; TRAIL; gene therapy; lentiviral; resistance; colorectal carcinoma

Funding

  1. Federal State of Saxonia-Anhalt
  2. German Ministry of Education and Research [1/09, 3/15, 6/08, 3/27]
  3. European Union through BioService Halle GmbH

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Colorectal carcinoma (CRC) constitutes a common malignancy with limited therapeutic options in metastasized stages. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSC) home to tumours and may therefore serve as a novel therapeutic tool for intratumoral delivery of antineoplastic factors. Tumour necrosis factor (TNF)-related apoptosis inducing ligand (TRAIL) which promises apoptosis induction preferentially in tumour cells represents such a factor. We generated TRAIL-MSC by transduction of human MSC with a third generation lentiviral vector system and analysed their characteristics and capacity to inhibit CRC growth. (1) TRAIL-MSC showed stable transgene expression with neither changes in the defining MSC characteristics nor signs of malignant transformation. (2) Upon direct in vitro coculture TRAIL-MSC induced apoptosis in TRAIL-sensitive CRC-cell lines (DLD-1 and HCT-15) but also in CRC-cell lines resistant to soluble TRAIL (HCT-8 and SW480). (3) In mixed subcutaneous (s.c.) xenografts TRAIL-MSC inhibited CRC-tumour growth presumably by apoptosis induction but a substantial proportion of TRAIL-MSC within the total tumour cell number was needed to yield such anti-tumour effect. (4) Systemic application of TRAIL-MSC had no effect on the growth of s.c. DLD-1 xenografts which appeared to be due to a pulmonary entrapment and low rate of tumour integration of TRAIL-MSC. Systemic TRAIL-MSC caused no toxicity in this model. (5) Wild-type MSC seemed to exert a tumour growth-supporting effect in mixed s.c. DLD-1 xenografts. These novel results support the idea that lentiviral TRAIL-transgenic human MSC may serve as vehicles for clinical tumour therapy but also highlight the need for further investigations to improve tumour integration of transgenic MSC and to clarify a potential tumour-supporting effect by MSC.

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