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Gene Therapy of Solid Cancers

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Cover of 'Gene Therapy of Solid Cancers'

Table of Contents

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    Book Overview
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    Chapter 1 Aptamer Targeting the ERBB2 Receptor Tyrosine Kinase for Applications in Tumor Therapy
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    Chapter 2 Gene Gun Her2/neu DNA Vaccination: Evaluation of Vaccine Efficacy in a Syngeneic Her2/neu Mouse Tumor Model.
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    Chapter 3 MIDGE Technology for the Production of a Fourfold Gene-Modified, Allogenic Cell-Based Vaccine for Cancer Therapy.
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    Chapter 4 Evaluation of Bystander Cell Killing Effects in Suicide Gene Therapy of Cancer: Engineered Thymidylate Kinase (TMPK)/AZT Enzyme-Prodrug Axis
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    Chapter 5 Oncoleaking: Use of the Pore-Forming Clostridium perfringens Enterotoxin (CPE) for Suicide Gene Therapy
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    Chapter 6 iCaspase 9 Suicide Gene System.
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    Chapter 7 p53-Encoding pDNA Purification by Affinity Chromatography for Cancer Therapy
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    Chapter 8 A qRT-PCR Method for Determining the Biodistribution Profile of a miR-34a Mimic.
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    Chapter 9 Design and Selection of Antisense Oligonucleotides Targeting Transforming Growth Factor Beta (TGF-β) Isoform mRNAs for the Treatment of Solid Tumors.
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    Chapter 10 RNA Interference for Antimetastatic Therapy
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    Chapter 11 STAT3 Decoy ODN Therapy for Cancer.
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    Chapter 12 Oncolytic Viral Therapy Using Reovirus
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    Chapter 13 Use of GLV-1h68 for Vaccinia Virotherapy and Monitoring
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    Chapter 14 Back to the Future: Are Tumor-Targeting Bacteria the Next-Generation Cancer Therapy? - PubMed - NCBI
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    Chapter 15 Ethics of Cancer Gene Transfer Clinical Research
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    Chapter 16 Planning an Academic Clinical Trial
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    Chapter 17 Production of Plasmid DNA as Pharmaceutical
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    Chapter 18 Minicircle: Next Generation DNA Vectors for Vaccination.
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    Chapter 19 A Phase 2, Open-Label, Randomized Study of Pexa-Vec (JX-594) Administered by Intratumoral Injection in Patients with Unresectable Primary Hepatocellular Carcinoma.
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    Chapter 20 Antiangiogenic Metargidin Peptide (AMEP) Gene Therapy in Disseminated Melanoma.
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    Chapter 21 Clinical Evaluation of ErbB-Targeted CAR T-Cells, Following Intracavity Delivery in Patients with ErbB-Expressing Solid Tumors.
Attention for Chapter 1: Aptamer Targeting the ERBB2 Receptor Tyrosine Kinase for Applications in Tumor Therapy
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Chapter title
Aptamer Targeting the ERBB2 Receptor Tyrosine Kinase for Applications in Tumor Therapy
Chapter number 1
Book title
Gene Therapy of Solid Cancers
Published in
Methods in molecular biology, January 2015
DOI 10.1007/978-1-4939-2727-2_1
Pubmed ID
Book ISBNs
978-1-4939-2726-5, 978-1-4939-2727-2
Authors

Georg Mahlknecht, Michael Sela, Yosef Yarden, Mahlknecht, Georg, Sela, Michael, Yarden, Yosef

Abstract

Aptamers are an emerging class of molecules in cancer therapy. They can be easily synthesized and are considered cost-effective drug candidates. In this book chapter we describe the selection and characterization of DNA aptamers specific to the human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (ERBB2/HER2), an oncogenic tyrosine kinase. First, a DNA aptamer library is applied and ERBB2-specific aptamers are selected using SELEX. Binders are subcloned into a pGEM-T vector, sequenced, and characterized using biochemical and cell biological techniques. By multimerizing the selected ERBB2 aptamers, it might be possible to significantly increase their avidity. For example, we could show that a trimeric ERBB2-specific aptamer could efficiently internalize membranal ERBB2. Furthermore, the receptor assembled in cytoplasmic puncta and was finally degraded by the lysosome. In addition, the selected, trimeric aptamer inhibited proliferation in an XTT assay in comparison to a control sequence. Aptamers selected using the protocol we describe might exert anticancer effect. In our example of a trimeric anti-HER2 aptamer, we could report that a human gastric xenograft mouse model demonstrated pharmacological value of the selected aptamer in vivo. This chapter should enable the interested reader to replicate selection of DNA aptamers specific to oncogenic cell surface. We would like to particularly emphasize some experimental approaches which were used to further characterize selected aptamer sequences, upon SELEX selection. For instance, we included several blotting techniques, antiproliferative assays of aptamers in vitro, and describe the handling of an in vivo human xenograft mouse model.

Mendeley readers

Mendeley readers

The data shown below were compiled from readership statistics for 11 Mendeley readers of this research output. Click here to see the associated Mendeley record.

Geographical breakdown

Country Count As %
China 1 9%
Unknown 10 91%

Demographic breakdown

Readers by professional status Count As %
Researcher 3 27%
Student > Ph. D. Student 2 18%
Student > Master 2 18%
Student > Bachelor 1 9%
Librarian 1 9%
Other 0 0%
Unknown 2 18%
Readers by discipline Count As %
Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology 4 36%
Agricultural and Biological Sciences 2 18%
Computer Science 1 9%
Chemistry 1 9%
Unknown 3 27%