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Dive into the research topics where Linda J. Lockett is active.

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Featured researches published by Linda J. Lockett.


Cancer Gene Therapy | 2002

Transcription-targeted gene therapy for androgen-independent prostate cancer

Rosetta Martiniello-Wilks; Tania Tsatralis; Peter Russell; Diana Brookes; Dorethea Zandvliet; Linda J. Lockett; Gerald W. Both; Peter L. Molloy; Pamela J. Russell

The Escherichia coli enzyme (purine nucleoside phosphorylase, PNP) gene is delivered directly into PC3 tumors by one injection of replication-deficient human type-5 adenovirus (Ad5). Expressed PNP converts the systemically administered prodrug, 6MPDR, to a toxic purine, 6MP, causing cell death. We sought to increase the specificity of recombinant Ad vectors by controlling PNP expression with the promoter region from the androgen-dependent, prostate-specific rat probasin (Pb) gene. To increase its activity, the promoter was combined with the SV40 enhancer (SVPb). Cell lines were transfected with plasmids containing both a reporter gene, under SVPb control, and a reference gene cassette to allow normalization of expression levels. Plasmids expressed ∼20-fold more reporter in prostate cancer than in other cells, but surprisingly, the SVPb element was both androgen-independent and retained substantial prostate specificity. Killing by Ad5-SVPb-PNP vector of cell lines cultured with 6MPDR for 6 days was 5- to 10-fold greater in prostate cancer than in liver or lung cells. In vivo, a single intratumoral injection of Ad5-SVPb-PNP (4×108 pfu), followed by 6MPDR administration twice daily for 6 days, significantly suppressed the growth of human prostate tumors in nude mice and increased their survival compared to control animals. Thus, the androgen-independent, prostate-targeting Ad5 vector reduces human prostate cancer growth significantly in vitro and in vivo. This first example of an androgen-independent vector points the way toward treatment of emerging androgen-independent prostate cancer in conjunction with hormone ablation therapy at a time when the tumor burden is low.


Vaccine | 2009

Ovine atadenovirus, a novel and highly immunogenic vector in prime-boost studies of a candidate HIV-1 vaccine.

Anne Bridgeman; Yaowaluck Roshorm; Linda J. Lockett; Zheng-Zhou Xu; Richard A. Hopkins; Jan Shaw; Gerald W. Both; Tomáš Hanke

Ovine adenovirus type 7 (OAdV) is the prototype member of the genus Atadenovirus. No immunity to the virus has so far been detected in human sera. We describe the construction and evaluation of a candidate HIV-1 vaccine based on OAdV and its utilisation alone and in combination with plasmid-, human adenovirus type 5 (HAdV5; a Mastadenovirus)-, and modified vaccinia Ankara (MVA)-vectored vaccines. All vectors expressed HIVA, an immunogen consisting of HIV-1 clade A consensus Gag-derived protein coupled to a T cell polyepitope. OAdV.HIVA was genetically stable, grew well and expressed high levels of protein from the Rous sarcoma virus promoter. OAdV.HIVA was highly immunogenic in mice and efficiently primed and boosted HIV-1-specific T cell responses together with heterologous HIVA-expressing vectors. There were significant differences between OAdV and HAdV5 vectors in priming of naïve CD8(+) T cell responses to HIVA and in the persistence of MHC class I-restricted epitope presentation in the local draining lymph nodes. OAdV.HIVA primed T cells more rapidly but was less persistent than AdV5.HIVA and thus induced a qualitatively distinct T cell response. Nevertheless, both vectors primed a response in mice that reduced viral titres in a surrogate challenge model by three to four orders of magnitude. Thus, OAdV is a novel, underexplored vaccine vector with potential for further development for HIV-1 and other vaccines. The data are discussed in the context of the latest HIV-1 vaccine developments.


Journal of Virology | 2008

Cryoelectron Microscopy Map of Atadenovirus Reveals Cross-Genus Structural Differences from Human Adenovirus

Radosav S. Pantelic; Linda J. Lockett; Rosalba Rothnagel; Ben Hankamer; Gerald W. Both

ABSTRACT A three-dimensional (3D) cryoelectron microscopy reconstruction of the prototype Atadenovirus (OAdV [an ovine adenovirus isolate]) showing information at a 10.6-Å resolution (0.5 Fourier shell correlation) was derived by single-particle analysis. This is the first 3D structure solved for any adenovirus that is not a Mastadenovirus, allowing cross-genus comparisons between structures and the assignment of genus-specific capsid proteins. Viable OAdV mutants that lacked the genus-specific LH3 and p32k proteins in purified virions were also generated. Negatively stained 3D reconstructions of these mutants were used to identify the location of protein LH3 and infer that of p32k within the capsid. The key finding was that LH3 is a critical protein that holds the outer capsid of the virus together. In its absence, the outer viral capsid is unstable. LH3 is located in the same position among the hexon subunits as its protein IX equivalent from mastadenoviruses but sits on top of the hexon trimers, forming prominent “knobs” on the virion surface that visually distinguish OAdV from other known AdVs. Electron density was also assigned to hexon and penton subunits and to proteins IIIa and VIII. There was good correspondence between OAdV density and human AdV hexon structures, which also validated the significant differences that were observed between the penton base protein structures.


Methods in molecular medicine | 2007

Production and release testing of ovine atadenovirus vectors.

Gerald W. Both; Fiona Helen Cameron; Anne Collins; Linda J. Lockett; Jan Shaw

Gene-directed enzyme prodrug therapy (GDEPT) is an emerging approach for the treatment of cancers. A variety of viral vectors have been used to deliver genes that encode the relevant enzymes, and some have been tested in clinical trials. To ensure the potency and efficacy of such vectors and to obtain regulatory approval to administer them to humans, it is necessary to develop a suite of assays that provide quality assurance. New GDEPT vectors based on ovine atadenovirus and Escherichia coli purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) have been developed for first time use in humans in a phase I trial for the treatment of prostate cancer. Here we describe methods for their production together with several quality-control assays. In particular, a functional cell killing assay was devised to measure the potency of PNP-GDEPT vectors, the principles of which could easily be adapted to other systems.


European Journal of Human Genetics | 2013

An association between the PTGS2 rs5275 polymorphism and colorectal cancer risk in families with inherited non-syndromic predisposition

Jason P. Ross; Linda J. Lockett; Diana Brookes; Bruce Tabor; Konsta Duesing; Michael Buckley; Trevor Lockett; Peter L. Molloy; Finlay Macrae; Graeme P. Young; Ignacio Blanco; Gabriel Capellá; Garry N. Hannan

Recently our group completed a genome-wide linkage study investigating Australian and Spanish families with inherited risk of colorectal cancer (CRC). A minor linkage peak from that study located on chromosome 1 correlates with the location of a known CRC risk-modifying gene, prostaglandin synthase (PTGS2). PTGS2 encodes the inducible prostaglandin synthase enzyme cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2). Prostaglandins are implicated in the initiation of carcinogenesis and progression of tumours. Sequencing of PTGS2 in a small subset of affected individuals identified a high frequency of the minor C allele of single nucleotide polymorphism rs5275. We then genotyped the rs5275 polymorphism in 183 affected and 223 unaffected individuals from our CRC predisposed families. Tests for association in the presence of linkage were made using family-based association tests. The C allele was found to be significantly associated (P<0.01) with diagnosis of hereditary non-syndromic CRC (P=0.0094, dominant model) and an earlier age of diagnosis (P=0.0089, heterozygous-advantage model). Interestingly, by stratifying the age of diagnosis data, we observed a speculative gender-discordant effect. Relative to other groups, female CC carriers were diagnosed less when young, but by 60 years of age were the most at risk group. Conversely, CT carriers of both genders showed a consistently earlier diagnosis relative to TT carriers. Our results suggest potential differential age-and gender-dependent efficacies of chemopreventative COX-2 inhibitors in the context of non-syndromic colorectal cancer.


BMC Cancer | 2014

Little evidence for association between the TGFBR1*6A variant and colorectal cancer: a family- based association study on non-syndromic family members from Australia and Spain

Jason P. Ross; Linda J. Lockett; Bruce Tabor; Ian W. Saunders; Graeme P. Young; Finlay Macrae; Ignacio Blanco; Gabriel Capellá; Glenn Brown; Trevor Lockett; Garry N. Hannan

BackgroundGenome-wide linkage studies have identified the 9q22 chromosomal region as linked with colorectal cancer (CRC) predisposition. A candidate gene in this region is transforming growth factor β receptor 1 (TGFBR1). Investigation of TGFBR1 has focused on the common genetic variant rs11466445, a short exonic deletion of nine base pairs which results in truncation of a stretch of nine alanine residues to six alanine residues in the gene product. While the six alanine (*6A) allele has been reported to be associated with increased risk of CRC in some population based study groups this association remains the subject of robust debate. To date, reports have been limited to population-based case–control association studies, or case–control studies of CRC families selecting one affected individual per family. No study has yet taken advantage of all the genetic information provided by multiplex CRC families.MethodsWe have tested for an association between rs11466445 and risk of CRC using several family-based statistical tests in a new study group comprising members of non-syndromic high risk CRC families sourced from three familial cancer centres, two in Australia and one in Spain.ResultsWe report a finding of a nominally significant result using the pedigree-based association test approach (PBAT; p = 0.028), while other family-based tests were non-significant, but with a p-value <; 0.10 in each instance. These other tests included the Generalised Disequilibrium Test (GDT; p = 0.085), parent of origin GDT Generalised Disequilibrium Test (GDT-PO; p = 0.081) and empirical Family-Based Association Test (FBAT; p = 0.096, additive model). Related-person case–control testing using the “More Powerful” Quasi-Likelihood Score Test did not provide any evidence for association (MQLS; p = 0.41).ConclusionsAfter conservatively taking into account considerations for multiple hypothesis testing, we find little evidence for an association between the TGFBR1*6A allele and CRC risk in these families. The weak support for an increase in risk in CRC predisposed families is in agreement with recent meta-analyses of case–control studies, which estimate only a modest increase in sporadic CRC risk among 6*A allele carriers.


Human Gene Therapy | 1998

In vivo gene therapy for prostate cancer: preclinical evaluation of two different enzyme-directed prodrug therapy systems delivered by identical adenovirus vectors.

Rosetta Martiniello-Wilks; Juanita Garcia-Aragon; Mirella M. Daja; Peter Russell; Gerald W. Both; Peter L. Molloy; Linda J. Lockett; Pamela J. Russell


Virology | 1993

Protective immunity to rotavirus-induced diarrhoea is passively transferred to newborn mice from naive dams vaccinated with a single dose of a recombinant adenovirus expressing rotavirus VP7sc.

Gerald W. Both; Linda J. Lockett; Vijayalakshmi Janardhana; Stirling J. Edwards; A.Richard Bellamy; Frank L. Graham; Ludvik Prevec; Marion E. Andrew


Clinical Cancer Research | 1997

Relative efficiency of tumor cell killing in vitro by two enzyme-prodrug systems delivered by identical adenovirus vectors.

Linda J. Lockett; Peter L. Molloy; Pamela J. Russell; Gerald W. Both


Archive | 2004

Modified gene-silencing nucleic acid molecules and uses thereof

Peter M. Waterhouse; Linda J. Lockett; Ming-Bo Wang; Timothy J. Doran; Robert J. Moore; Gerald W. Both

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Gerald W. Both

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Peter L. Molloy

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Pamela J. Russell

Queensland University of Technology

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Diana Brookes

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Ming-Bo Wang

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Peter M. Waterhouse

Queensland University of Technology

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Timothy J. Doran

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Bruce Tabor

Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

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Finlay Macrae

Royal Melbourne Hospital

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