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Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina
Selective killing of tumor cells is an important goal for cancer therapeutics. The tumor suppressor transcription factor p53 is absent or mutated in more than 50% of human tumors. Thus, determining approaches that use p53 status to regulate therapy may be an important strategy for attaining cancer selectivity. We have shown previously that a designed transcriptional repressor, K25F, strongly and selectively reduces the expression of its target gene MDR1. In this study, we exploited p53 status and the strong repressor activity of K25F to establish a system for preferential killing of p53-negative cells. In this system, the expression of K25F is induced by p53 in normal cells, and the K25F repressor then inhibits the expression of herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (HSV-TK) driven by an MDR1 minipromoter. In p53-deficient cells, little K25F is expressed, and thus HSV-TK is expressed, allowing the cells to be killed by ganciclovir (GCV). K25F induced by exogenous p53 dramatically reduced the expression of HSV-TK in human embryonic kidney 293 cells, and it subsequently increased cell survival in response to GCV. To further evaluate this approach in a uniform genetic background, we developed Saos-2 cells stably expressing physiological levels of p53 and paired them with wild-type p53-negative Saos-2 cells. Stable expression of moderate levels of p53 in Saos-2 cells was able to induce the expression of K25F and reduce HSV-TK expression and resulted in a modest but distinct protection from GCV toxicity. Thus, this system may be suitable for further development as an approach to selective cancer therapy.
Received January 9, 2003; accepted April 10, 2003.
Address correspondence to: Dr. Rudy L. Juliano, Department of Pharmacology, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599. E-mail: arjay{at}med.unc.edu
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