Bcl-2 overexpression improves survival and efficacy of neural stem cell-mediated enzyme prodrug therapy

Mooney R, etc
Stem Cells, 2018


Tumor-tropic neural stem cells (NSCs) can be engineered to localize gene therapies to invasive brain tumors. However, like other stem cell-based therapies, survival of therapeutic NSCs after transplantation is currently sub-optimal. One approach to prolonging cell survival is to transiently overexpress an anti-apoptotic protein within the cells prior to transplantation. Here we investigate the utility and safety of this approach using a clinically tested, v-myc immortalized, human NSC line engineered to contain the suicide gene, cytosine deaminase (CD-NSCs). We demonstrate that both adenoviral and minicircle-driven expression of the anti-apoptotic protein Bcl-2, can partially rescue CD-NSCs from transplant-associated insults. We further demonstrate that the improved CD-NSC survival afforded by transient Bcl-2 overexpression results in decreased tumor burden in an orthotopic xenograft glioma mouse model following administrations of intracerebral CD-NSCs and systemic prodrug. Importantly, no evidence of CD-NSC transformation was observed upon transient overexpression of Bcl-2. This research highlights a critical need to develop clinically relevant strategies to improve survival of therapeutic stem cells post-transplantation. We demonstrate for the first time in this disease setting that improving CD-NSC survival using Bcl-2 overexpression can significantly improve therapeutic outcomes.

Read more »

Journal
Stem Cells
Year
2018
Page
doi:
Institute
City of Hope