Kijima H, Scanlon KJ. Ribozyme as an approach for growth suppression of human pancreatic cancer.
Mol Biotechnol 2000;
14:59-72. [PMID:
10911615 DOI:
10.1385/mb:14:1:59]
[Citation(s) in RCA: 16] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/11/2022]
Abstract
Ribozymes (catalytic RNAs, RNA enzymes) are effective modulators of gene expression because of their simple structure, site-specific cleavage activity, and catalytic potential, and have potentially important implications for cancer gene therapy. Point mutations in the K-ras oncogene are found in approx 90% of human pancreatic carcinomas, and can be used as potential targets for specific ribozyme-mediated reversal of the malignant phenotype. In this study, we focused on in vitro manipulation of ribozyme targeting of the mutated K-ras oncogene in a human pancreatic carcinoma cell line. We evaluated the efficacy of an anti-K-ras hammerhead ribozyme targeted against GUU-mutated codon 12 of the K-ras gene in cultured pancreatic carcinoma cell lines. The anti-K-ras ribozyme significantly reduced cellular K-ras mRNA level (GUU-mutated codon 12) when the ribozyme was transfected into the Capan-1 pancreatic carcinoma cells. The ribozyme inhibited proliferation of the transfected Capan-1 cells. These results suggested that this ribozyme is capable of reversing the malignant phenotype in human pancreatic carcinoma cells.
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