Journal of Translational Medicine (Aug 2010)

Adenoviruses with an α<sub>v</sub>β integrin targeting moiety in the fiber shaft or the HI-loop increase tumor specificity without compromising antitumor efficacy in magnetic resonance imaging of colorectal cancer metastases

  • Lavilla-Alonso Sergio,
  • Bauerschmitz Gerd,
  • Abo-Ramadan Usama,
  • Halavaara Juha,
  • Escutenaire Sophie,
  • Diaconu Iulia,
  • Tatlisumak Turgut,
  • Kanerva Anna,
  • Hemminki Akseli,
  • Pesonen Sari

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1479-5876-8-80
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
p. 80

Abstract

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Abstract Background Colorectal cancer is often a deadly disease and cannot be cured at metastatic stage. Oncolytic adenoviruses have been considered as a new therapeutic option for treatment of refractory disseminated cancers, including colorectal cancer. The safety data has been excellent but tumor transduction and antitumor efficacy especially in systemic administration needs to be improved. Methods Here, the utility of αvβ integrin targeting moiety Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) in the Lys-Lys-Thr-Lys (KKTK) domain of the fiber shaft or in the HI-loop of adenovirus serotype 5 for increased tumor targeting and antitumor efficacy was evaluated. To this end, novel spleen-to-liver metastatic colorectal cancer mouse model was used and the antitumor efficacy was evaluated with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Results Both modifications (RGD in the HI-loop or in the fiber shaft) increased gene transfer efficacy in colorectal cancer cell lines and improved tumor-to-normal ratio in systemic administration of the vector. Conclusions Antitumor potency was not compromised with RGD modified viruses suggesting increased safety profile and tumor specificity.