Development of a flexible and potent hypoxia-inducible promoter for tumor-targeted gene expression in attenuated Salmonella

Asferd Mengesha, Ludwig Dubois, Philippe Lambin, Willy Landuyt, Roland K. Chiu, Bradly G. Wouters, Jan Theys*

*Corresponding author for this work

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Abstract

To increase the potential of attenuated Salmonella as gene delivery vectors for cancer treatment, we developed a hypoxia-inducible promoter system to limit gene expression tumor specifically to the tumor. This approach is envisaged to not only increase but also to target those cells that are most resistant to conventional therapies. We demonstrate that the exponential growth of the attenuated bacteria is identical under normoxia and hypoxia. A hypoxia-inducible promoter (HIP-1) was created from a portion of the endogenous Salmonella pepT promoter and was shown to drive reporter gene expression under both acute and chronic hypoxia, but not under normoxia. Genetic engineering of the TATA- and FNR-box within HIP-1 allowed fine-tuning of gene induction, resulting in hypoxic induction factors of up to 200-fold. Finally, we demonstrate that HIP-1 can drive hypoxia-mediated gene expression in bacteria which have colonized human tumor xenografts in mouse models. Expression of both GFP and RFP under control of HIP-1 demonstrated an similar to 15-fold increase relative to a constitutive promoter when tumors were made hypoxic. Moreover, the use of a constitutive promoter resulted in reporter gene expression in both tumors and normal tissues, whereas reporter gene expressing using HIP-1 was confined to the tumor.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1120-1128
Number of pages9
JournalCancer Biology & Therapy
Volume5
Issue number9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2006

Keywords

  • Salmonella typhimurium
  • hypoxia
  • gene therapy
  • induction
  • ANTITUMOR AGENT
  • CYTOSINE DEAMINASE
  • ESCHERICHIA-COLI
  • DELIVERY-SYSTEM
  • IN-VITRO
  • TYPHIMURIUM
  • THERAPY
  • FNR
  • TRANSCRIPTION
  • ANGIOGENESIS

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