Aerosol Delivery of Small Hairpin Osteopontin Blocks Pulmonary Metastasis of Breast Cancer in Mice
Article 2010 en
Authors
KY
Kyeong‐Nam Yu
AM
Arash Minai‐Tehrani
SC
Seung-Hee Chang
Abstract
1 min read
Background Metastasis to the lung may be the final step in the breast cancer-related morbidity. Conventional therapies such as chemotherapy and surgery are somewhat successful, however, metastasis-related breast cancer morbidity remains high. Thus, a novel approach to prevent breast tumor metastasis is needed. Methodology/Principal Finding Aerosol of lentivirus-based small hairpin osteopontin was delivered into mice with breast cancer twice a week for 1 or 2 months using a nose-only inhalation system. The effects of small hairpin osteopontin on breast cancer metastasis to the lung were evaluated using near infrared imaging as well as diverse molecular techniques. Aerosol-delivered small hairpin osteopontin significantly decreased the expression level of osteopontin and altered the expression of several important metastasis-related proteins in our murine breast cancer model. Conclusion/Significance Aerosol-delivered small hairpin osteopontin blocked breast cancer metastasis. Our results showed that noninvasive targeting of pulmonary osteopontin or other specific genes responsible for cancer metastasis could be used as an effective therapeutic regimen for the treatment of metastatic epithelial tumors.
Arash Minai‐Tehrani, Seung-Hee Chang, Jung‐Taek Kwon, Soon‐Kyung Hwang, Ji‐Eun Kim, Ji‐Young Shin, Kyeong‐Nam Yu, Sung Jin Park, Hu‐Lin Jiang, Jihye Kim, Seongho Hong, Bitna Kang, Duyeoul Kim, Chanhee Chae, Kee-Ho Lee, George R. Beck, Myung‐Haing Cho
Seung-Hee Chang, Arash Minai‐Tehrani, Ji‐Young Shin, Sung Jin Park, Ji‐Eun Kim, Kyeong‐Nam Yu, Seongho Hong, Choongman Hong, Kee-Ho Lee, George R. Beck, Myung‐Haing Cho
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.