Breast Cancer Research

official impact factor 5.79

Review

Gene therapy for carcinoma of the breast: Genetic ablation strategies

David T Curiel

Author Affiliations

Gene Therapy Clinic, The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama, USA

Breast Cancer Res 2000, 2:45-49 doi:10.1186/bcr28

Published: 17 December 1999

Abstract

The gene therapy strategy of mutation compensation is designed to rectify the molecular lesions that are etiologic for neoplastic transformation. For dominant oncogenes, such approaches involve the functional knockout of the dysregulated cellular control pathways provoked by the overexpressed oncoprotein. On this basis, molecular interventions may be targeted to the transcriptional level of expression, via antisense or ribozymes, or post-transcriptionally, via intracellular single chain antibodies (intrabodies). For carcinoma of the breast, these approaches have been applied in the context of the disease linked oncogenes erbB-2 and cyclin D1, as well as the estrogen receptor. Neoplastic revision accomplished in modal systems has rationalized human trials on this basis.

Keywords:
antisense; dominant-negative; gene therapy; oncogene; ribozyme