4.6 Review

Bacterial vectors for imaging and cancer gene therapy: a review

Journal

CANCER GENE THERAPY
Volume 19, Issue 11, Pages 731-740

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/cgt.2012.59

Keywords

bioluminescence; lux; fluorescence; IVIS; PET; tumor; probe

Funding

  1. European Commission [PIOF-GA-2009-255466]
  2. Irish Health Research Board [HRA_POR/2010/138, HRB_PhD/2007/4]
  3. Irish Cancer Society [CRF11CRO]
  4. Health Research Board (HRB) [HRA-POR-2010-138] Funding Source: Health Research Board (HRB)

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The significant burden of resistance to conventional anticancer treatments in patients with advanced disease has prompted the need to explore alternative therapeutic strategies. The challenge for oncology researchers is to identify a therapy which is selective for tumors with limited toxicity to normal tissue. Engineered bacteria have the unique potential to overcome traditional therapies' limitations by specifically targeting tumors. It has been shown that bacteria are naturally capable of homing to tumors when systemically administered resulting in high levels of replication locally, either external to (non-invasive species) or within tumor cells (pathogens). Pre-clinical and clinical investigations involving bacterial vectors require relevant means of monitoring vector trafficking and levels over time, and development of bacterial-specific real-time imaging modalities are key for successful development of clinical bacterial gene delivery. This review discusses the currently available imaging technologies and the progress to date exploiting these for monitoring of bacterial gene delivery in vivo.

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