Expression of VL30 Vectors in Human Cells That Are Targets for Gene Therapy

1995 ◽  
Vol 209 (2) ◽  
pp. 677-683 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.K. Chakraborty ◽  
M.A. Zink ◽  
C.P. Hodgson
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Zachary K. Lindstrom ◽  
Steven J. Brewer ◽  
Melanie A. Ferguson ◽  
Sandra H. Burnett ◽  
Brian D. Jensen

Delivering foreign molecules into human cells is a wide and ongoing area of research. Gene therapy, or delivering nucleic acids into cells via nonviral or viral pathways, is an especially promising area for pharmaceutics. All gene therapy methods have their respective advantages and disadvantages, including limited delivery efficiency and low viability. We present an electromechanical method for delivering foreign molecules into human cells. Nanoinjection, or delivering molecules into cells using a solid lance, has proven to be highly efficient while maintaining high viability levels. This paper describes an array of solid silicon microlances that was tested to determine efficiency and viability when nanoinjecting tens of thousands of HeLa cells simultaneously. Propidium iodide (PI), a dye that fluoresces when bound to nucleic acids and does not fluoresce when unbound, was delivered into cells using the lance array. Results show that the lance array delivers PI into up to 78% of a nanoinjected HeLa cell culture, while maintaining 78–91% viability. With these results, we submit the nanoinjection method using a silicon lance array as another promising particle delivery method for mammalian culture cells.


Viruses ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 1311 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexis Duvergé ◽  
Matteo Negroni

Delivering transgenes to human cells through transduction with viral vectors constitutes one of the most encouraging approaches in gene therapy. Lentivirus-derived vectors are among the most promising vectors for these approaches. When the genetic modification of the cell must be performed in vivo, efficient specific transduction of the cell targets of the therapy in the absence of off-targeting constitutes the Holy Grail of gene therapy. For viral therapy, this is largely determined by the characteristics of the surface proteins carried by the vector. In this regard, an important property of lentiviral vectors is the possibility of being pseudotyped by envelopes of other viruses, widening the panel of proteins with which they can be armed. Here, we discuss how this is achieved at the molecular level and what the properties and the potentialities of the different envelope proteins that can be used for pseudotyping these vectors are.


Blood ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 116 (21) ◽  
pp. 3648-3648
Author(s):  
James A Kennedy ◽  
Sara Berthiaume ◽  
Frederic Barabe

Abstract Abstract 3648 The studies identifying gene translocations and mutations in T-ALL cell lines and/or in patients have contributed significantly to the understanding of the genetic abnormalities involved in T-ALL. However, studies on the biology of these genes, the targeted cells, the sequence and the number of hits required to convert a primary human hematopoietic stem cell (HSC)/progenitor cell into a fully transformed leukemic cell require good experimental models of human T cell development both in vivo and in vitro. The only in vivo model of human T cell leukemogenesis came unexpectedly from the gene therapy trial on patients with X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID-X1). Three to five years after gene therapy, 4 out of 10 patients in the trial developed clonal T-ALL. In these patients, retroviral integrations were found in proximity to the LMO2 promoter in the malignant clones, leading to aberrant expression of the oncogene. However, little is known on the effect of LMO2 overexpression in human cells and how it facilitates the development of T-ALL. We have developed in vivo and in vitro models to study the role of T cell oncogenes in human cells. Using the OP9-DL1 co-culture system to differentiate human HSC into mature T cells in vitro, we culture human HSC transduced with lentiviruses expressing LMO2. LMO2 overexpressing cells are blocked at the double negative stage (CD4-CD8-) of differentiation when co-cultured on OP9-Delta-Like1 stroma and proliferate 50 to 100 times more than control cells. However, these cells are not immortalized and cultures lasted approximately 80 days. LMO2 overexpression have no effect on myeloid differentiation in vitro. In vivo, LMO2 transduced human HSC/progenitor cells engraft the bone marrow of immunodeficient mice to levels comparable to control cells, while normal myeloid and B cell populations 20–24 weeks post-transplantation. LMO2 transduced cells have an increased capacity to generate T cells in the thymus in comparison to control cells (42% engraftment vs 8%, p<0.0001). Surprisingly, thymic and peripheral LMO2 cells are not blocked in their differentiation. LMO2 cells did not engraft secondary mice, confirming that LMO2 doesn't induce self-renewal of human HSC. However, the increase in thymic repopulation by LMO2 cells and the lack of differentiation block in vivo suggest that LMO2 overexpression generates an abnormal T cell population with an increase repopulation advantage (increase proliferation or decrease apoptosis) in the thymus which becomes the substrate for additional genetic/epigenetic events. To test this hypothesis, we tried to immortalize LMO2 cells in vitro with secondary hits. Our preliminary results show that insertional mutagenesis can immortalized LMO2 cells in vitro. However these cells are not able to engraft immunodeficient mice or generate leukemia in vivo. The addition of intracellular NOTCH to one immortalized LMO2 cell line allows these cells to engraft and generate human T-ALL in vivo. Globally, these results show that T cell oncogenes can be studied in primary human hematopoietic cells both in vitro and in vivo. Also, at least three hits are required to transform a human primary HSC/progenitor cell into a leukemic cell able to engraft and generate leukemia in vivo. It also suggests that a non-engrafting cell can be turned into a leukemic cell generating leukemia in vivo, implying that a cell can regain self-renewing properties. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Author(s):  
Hansel Ihn ◽  
Hyunwoo Kang ◽  
Brenda Iglesias ◽  
Osamu Sugiyama ◽  
Amy Tang ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Ryosuke Kurauchi ◽  
Hiroi Kasai ◽  
Tatsuya Ito

Medical products comprising human cells, genes, and tissues have been developed for clinical applications worldwide, and their developmental environment has been established. These products can be imported and exported, but marketing authorization regulations are complicated among regions. This investigation was conducted to identify the characteristics of medical products comprising human cells, genes, and tissues. We used website data, books from survey companies, and reports from public agencies to conduct two investigations. We used website data to conduct a general information survey of 143 cell-therapy and gene-therapy products sold in 24 countries and public assessment reports to individually survey non-clinical and clinical developments of 18 cell-therapy and gene-therapy products developed in Japan and the European Union (EU). The first survey revealed that the numbers of products used in orthopedic surgery and dermatology have increased since 2000, and the numbers of hematological products have increased since 2011. The second investigation revealed that fewer orphaned products were developed in Japan than in the EU. The most appropriate dose was 1.2 × 108 cells per injection per adult. Clinical trials to determine the most appropriate dose were conducted in the EU but not in Japan. No non-clinical immunogenicity tests for autogenous products were conducted in Japan or the EU. Pharmacokinetics tests were not individually performed for sheet-form products. Both in vivo and in vitro pharmacological tests were more likely to be conducted in the EU, while only one or the other was conducted in Japan. Furthermore, in Japan, carcinogenicity tests were performed based on non-clinical technical guidance, while in the EU, these tests were determined according to each product's features. Fewer clinical trials were performed, and fewer subjects per product were used in Japan than in the EU. Many aspects of the clinical and non-clinical development of medical products comprising human cells, genes, and tissues differ between Japan and the EU. Analyzing these differences will enable the safe and rapid distribution of these products to clinical sites.


2014 ◽  
Vol 56 (8) ◽  
pp. 681-688 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jingwen Niu ◽  
Bin Zhang ◽  
Hu Chen
Keyword(s):  

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