Purpose: We decided to construct a novel oncolytic adenovirus whose replication was driven by the CDC25B promoter for its use in preclinical models of pancreatic cancer.
Experimental Design: We placed the essential E1A gene under control of the CDC25B promoter. Based on preliminary data, we pseudotyped the adenovirus with a chimeric fiber of serotypes 5/3. We investigated the in vitro lytic effect and the in vivo therapeutic efficacy in combination with gemcitabine on human pancreatic tumor xenografts orthotopically growing in nude mice and in tumors growing in Syrian hamsters. We also assessed biochemical markers of hepatic toxicity and CA19.9 levels.
Results: AV25CDC exhibited a strong in vitro lytic effect on pancreatic cancer cells. In vivo administration of AV25CDC combined with gemcitabine in mice harboring subcutaneously growing SW1990 pancreatic tumors almost abrogated tumor growth. Nude mice harboring 15-day-old orthotopic tumors, treated intratumorally or systemically with AV25CDC combined with gemcitabine, exhibited 70% to 80% reduction in tumor size compared with control mice that lasted for at least 60 days. Chemovirotherapy treatment induced a return to normal levels of biochemical parameters of hepatic toxicity; these mice exhibited more than 90% reduction in CA19.9 serum levels compared with control. Chemovirotherapy efficacy was confirmed in mice harboring Mia PaCa-2 tumors and in Syrian hamster harboring HaP-T1 tumors. We observed that viral treatment disrupted tumor architecture and induced an increase in MMP-9 activity that might facilitate gemcitabine penetrability.
Conclusion: These data demonstrate that AV25CDC is an effective oncolytic agent candidate for pancreatic cancer chemovirotherapy combination.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-14-2316 | DOI Listing |
Background: Alzheimer's Disease (AD) has a strong spatial-temporal component to its progression, where different brain regions are affected by amyloid-beta (Aβ) plaque deposition at varying time points and in distinct cell types. Standard imaging and analysis platforms can neglect these details, as they lack the ability to pair high-yield whole-brain imaging with region-specific or high-resolution analysis. Here we describe a novel high-throughput whole-brain imaging pipeline to quantitatively track plaque progression as a function of brain region across time, while also producing indexed tissue sections for secondary staining and analysis that can be registered back to the original brain image.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Two main risk factors of Alzheimer's disease (AD) are aging and APOE-ε4. However, some individuals remain cognitively normal despite having these risk factors. They are considered "cognitively resilient".
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a devastating form of dementia, and its prevalence is rising as human lifespan increases. Our lab created the AD-BXD mouse model, which expresses AD mutations across a genetically diverse reference panel (BXD), to identify factors that confer resilience to cognitive decline in AD. This model mimics key characteristics of human AD including variation in age of onset and severity of cognitive decline.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Previous studies have documented age-related changes in behavior and cognitive functions and investigated the molecular changes in aging brain using inbred mouse strains such as C57BL/6, BALB/c etc. In this study using a genetically heterogenous mouse population (UM-HET3) we investigated age-related changes in motor and memory functions and their association with blood cell measures.
Method: Both male and female UM-HET3 mice at age of 11 months (middle-aged) and 25 months (old) were used in this study.
Background: Sleep dysfunctions are highly comorbid with Alzheimer's disease (AD), though often associated with later stages of AD, sleep disruptions have been noted to appear decades before the onset of cognitive symptoms. Here, we provide the first evidence that genetic factors interact with AD mutations to influence sleep behavior even before the onset of cognitive symptoms.
Method: To identify novel genetic factors underlying disordered sleep that precede cognitive decline in our AD-BXD mouse genetic reference panel (n = 179 mice across 25 strains, 7-months-old), we first used sleep phenotypes measured in the PiezoSleep chambers and performed quantitative trait loci (QTL) mapping and discovered Kirrel3 as the novel gene candidate associated with disordered sleep.
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