Molecular Therapy: Oncolytics (Sep 2023)

Interleukin-6-controlled, mesenchymal stem cell-based sodium/iodide symporter gene therapy improves survival of glioblastoma-bearing mice

  • Carolin Kitzberger,
  • Khuram Shehzad,
  • Volker Morath,
  • Rebekka Spellerberg,
  • Julius Ranke,
  • Katja Steiger,
  • Roland E. Kälin,
  • Gabriele Multhoff,
  • Matthias Eiber,
  • Franz Schilling,
  • Rainer Glass,
  • Wolfgang A. Weber,
  • Ernst Wagner,
  • Peter J. Nelson,
  • Christine Spitzweg

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30
pp. 238 – 253

Abstract

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New treatment strategies are urgently needed for glioblastoma (GBM)—a tumor resistant to standard-of-care treatment with a high risk of recurrence and extremely poor prognosis. Based on their intrinsic tumor tropism, adoptively applied mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) can be harnessed to deliver the theranostic sodium/iodide symporter (NIS) deep into the tumor microenvironment. Interleukin-6 (IL-6) is a multifunctional, highly expressed cytokine in the GBM microenvironment including recruited MSCs. MSCs engineered to drive NIS expression in response to IL-6 promoter activation offer the possibility of a new tumor-targeted gene therapy approach of GBM. Therefore, MSCs were stably transfected with an NIS-expressing plasmid controlled by the human IL-6 promoter (IL-6-NIS-MSCs) and systemically applied in mice carrying orthotopic GBM. Enhanced radiotracer uptake by 18F-Tetrafluoroborate-PET/magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was detected in tumors after IL-6-NIS-MSC application as compared with mice that received wild-type MSCs. Ex vivo analysis of tumors and non-target organs showed tumor-specific NIS protein expression. Subsequent 131I therapy after IL-6-NIS-MSC application resulted in significantly delayed tumor growth assessed by MRI and improved median survival up to 60% of GBM-bearing mice as compared with controls. In conclusion, the application of MSC-mediated NIS gene therapy focusing on IL-6 biology-induced NIS transgene expression represents a promising approach for GBM treatment.

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