Jg. Hay et al., Targeting the replication of adenoviral gene therapy vectors to lung cancer cells: The importance of the adenoviral E1b-55kD gene, HUM GENE TH, 10(4), 1999, pp. 579-590
It has been proposed that an adenovirus with the E1b-55kD gene deleted has
a selective advantage in replicating in cancer cells that have mutations in
the p53 gene (Bischoff et al,, 1996), We have explored this hypothesis in
several lung cancer cell lines, and evaluated potential mechanisms that mig
ht regulate the replication of Ad338, an E1b-55kD-deleted virus, with the o
bjective of developing a rational approach for targeting gene therapy to lu
ng tumors. Our data show that Ad338 replicates poorly in three lung cancer
cell lines with various p53 mutations (H441, H446, and Calu1), yet this vir
us replicates to a high level in a lung cancer cell line with wild-type p53
(A549) and in a normal lung fibroblast line (IMR90), Viral DNA replication
, expression of viral proteins, and shutoff of host cell proteins were not
important variables in limiting the replication of the E1b-55kD-deleted vir
us. However, the cell lines resistant to host cell protein shutoff were als
o the most resistant to the cytopathic effect induced by mutant and wild-ty
pe virus and the only cells to survive for 8 days following infection. The
E1b-55kD protein clearly has an important role in viral replication beyond
its interaction with p53, Thus, an E1b-55kD-deleted virus cannot be used to
specifically target viral replication to p53-mutated lung cancer cells.