Article
Gene Electrotransfer of Canine Interleukin 12 into Canine Melanoma Cell Lines.
Registro en:
LAMPREHT, U. et al. Gene Electrotransfer of Canine Interleukin 12 into Canine Melanoma Cell Lines. Journal of Membrane Biology, v. 248, p. 909–917, 2015.
0022-2631
10.1007/s00232-015-9800-2
Autor
Lampreht, Ursa
Kamensek, Urska
Stimac, Monika
Sersa, Gregor
Tozon, Natasa
Bosnjak, Masa
Brozic, Andreja
Oliveira, Geraldo Gileno de Sá
Nakagawa, Takayuki
Saeki, Kohei
Cemazar, Maja
Resumen
Abstract A gene electrotransfer (GET) of interleukin 12
(IL-12) had already given good results when treating tumors
in human and veterinary clinical trials. So far, plasmids
used in veterinary clinical studies encoded a human or
a feline IL-12 and an ampicillin resistance gene, which is
not recommended by the regulatory agencies to be used in
clinical trials. Therefore, the aim of the current study was
to construct the plasmid encoding a canine IL-12 with
kanamycin antibiotic resistance gene that could be used in
veterinary clinical oncology. The validation of the newly
constructed plasmid was carried out on canine malignant
melanoma cells, which have not been used in GET studies
so far, and on human malignant melanoma cells. Canine
and human malignant melanoma cell lines were transfected
with plasmid encoding enhanced green fluorescence
protein at different pulse parameter conditions to determine
the transfection efficiency and cell survival. The IL-12
expression of the most suitable conditions for GET of the
plasmid encoding canine IL-12 was determined at mRNA
level by the qRT-PCR and at protein level with the ELISpot
assay. The obtained results showed that the newly
constructed plasmid encoding canine IL-12 had similar or
even higher expression capacity than the plasmid encoding
human IL-12. Therefore, it represents a promising
therapeutic plasmid for further IL-12 gene therapy in
clinical studies for spontaneous canine tumors. Additionally,
it also meets the main regulatory agencies’ (FDA and
EMA) criteria.