PMID: 8946941Dec 1, 1996Paper

Cationic lipids reduce time and dose of c-myc antisense oligodeoxynucleotides required to specifically inhibit Burkitt's lymphoma cell growth

Leukemia
S A WilliamsM S Cairo

Abstract

Burkitt's lymphoma is characterized by a translocation of the c-myc gene with one of the immunoglobulin loci which activates overexpression of the c-myc oncogene. Antisense-oligodeoxynucleotides (AS-ODNs) offer the potential to block specific c-myc gene expression within lymphoma cells, but often exhibit a low efficiency of AS-ODN uptake. In this study, a polycationic lipid reagent, Lipofectamine (LFM), was utilized as a vehicle to increase efficiency of delivery, decrease the time needed to observe an inhibitory effect, and decrease the AS-ODN dose. The objective was to develop a more efficient and rapid in vitro AS-ODN strategy to inhibit proliferation of c-myc-dependent lymphoma cells and to test the specificity of Burkitt's lymphoma cell line-directed AS-ODNs for potential use as molecular purging agents in bone marrow transplantation. Proliferation assays were performed to determine the inhibitory effect of the AS-ODNs on two Burkitt's lymphoma cell lines with different chromosomal translocations, Daudi and ST486, in medium containing 8.5 microM LFM. AS-ODNs at a concentration of 0.36 microM induced a significant decrease in proliferation for both cell lines using the specific AS-ODN for each respective translocation. With...Continue Reading

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