Tumor hypoxia is often found in many human cancers; their presence has been implicated in radio- and chemoresistance, a more aggressive phenotype, and is an important prognostic factor of treatment outcome. The long term goal of this proposal is to develop an image-guided therapeutic strategy, combining hypoxia imaging, radiotherapy and gene therapy, to overcome hypoxia-mediated radioresistance and improve cancer cure. The major facets of this strategy are 1) the imaging and localization of tumor hypoxia, 2) image-guided delivery of vectors that express a radiosensitizing effector gene as well as a hypoxia-induced marker gene, 3) verification of vector delivery to hypoxic cells by molecular imaging, and 4) tumor eradication by radiation. To evaluate and validate this approach, there are three Specific Aims:
In Specific Aim I, we shall design and construct vectors that express both a marker gene HSV1-tk from ahypoxia-inducible promoter and an effector gene that antagonizes the repair of DNA breaks, and use them to stablytransfect tumor cell lines. The degree of radiosensitization of tumor cells that constitutively express various effector geneswill be assessed in vitro and in vivo; the specific expression of the viral tk gene in hypoxic cells will be evaluated bymicroPET imaging of TK-mediated trapping of 124I-FIAU in tumors transplanted in nude mice.
In Specific Aim II, we shall evaluate the efficacy of adenovirus-mediated delivery of the marker gene and theeffector gene, the hypoxia inducibility of the marker tk gene, and the radiosensitizing effect of the effector gene in vitroand in vivo. To improve viral distribution and infection efficiency, we shall develop and evaluate the use of conditionally-replicativeadenovirus in combination with replication-defective adenovirus expressing the effector and marker genes.
In Specific Aim III, we shall transplant rodent and human tumors into nude rats, identify and localize the hypoxicsub-volume using microPET/18F-FMISO imaging. Guided by these images, adenoviral vectors will be delivered to thehypoxic region of the tumor and microPET imaging based on TK-mediated trapping of 124I-FIAU will be used to verify thepreferential delivery of the vectors to hypoxic cells. The tumor's response to radiation will then be evaluated.In pilot studies, we have shown that antisense Ku70 or a dominant negative Ku70 fragment significantly radiosensitizeshypoxic tumor cells in vitro and in vivo, and that they can be successfully delivered into tumors by adenoviralvectors, For tumor hypoxia targeting, we have implemented microPET imaging with 18F-FMISO and developed astereotaxic template for guiding adenoviral vector injection. Also, we have shown that the hypoxia-induction of the markertk gene can be readily detected using 124I-FIAU / microPET in vivo. The information gained from the proposed preclinicalstudies will serve as a guide in the design of clinical strategy to improve the outcome of cancer therapy.
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