Cell engineering for muscle gene therapy: Extemporaneous production of retroviral vector packaging macrophages using defective herpes simplex virus type 1 vectors harbouring gag, pol, env genes
- PMID: 19003367
- PMCID: PMC3449948
- DOI: 10.1023/A:1008022713466
Cell engineering for muscle gene therapy: Extemporaneous production of retroviral vector packaging macrophages using defective herpes simplex virus type 1 vectors harbouring gag, pol, env genes
Abstract
Gene therapy as a treatment for neuromuscular diseases is an ever-developing concept based on the use of DNA as the therapeutic agent. In the search for appropriate strategies a bottleneck exists, however, concerning the targeting of vectors carrying the therapeutic gene, to all pathologic sites. These diseases are often characterised by multiple widespread lesions spread over a large area, rendering administration by local injection into tissues, clinically irrelevant. With this in mind, we have proposed that circulating cells (monocytes/macrophages), which home naturally to inflammatory lesions, characteristic of degenerating muscle, could be used as shuttles able to track down every damaged site, and deliver there a corrective gene. Our aim is to mobilise a corrective gene from these infiltrating monocyte-macrophages, into muscle cells, a process of in situ cell to cell gene transfer which could be accomplished using a retroviral vector, since the regeneration process involves the proliferation of muscle precursors before they fuse to form replacement fibres. For this, monocyte-macrophages must be engineered into 'packaging cells' containing both the replication deficient retrovirus carrying the gene of interest and an helper genome (gag-pol-env) needed for its assembly and secretion. Here, we have transduced a monocyte cell line using a defective murine Moloney leukemia retrovirus carrying the LacZ reporter gene. This provided us with a platform to investigate the possibility of gag-pol-env vector driven packaging of the defective retrovirus by macrophages. We show that an herpes simplex virus type I amplicon harbouring the Moloney gag, pol, env sequences is able to rescue the defective retrovirus vector from macrophages, allowing gene transfer into muscle precursor cells. After fusion, these cells gave rise to genetically modified myotubes in vitro.
Similar articles
-
Defective herpes simplex virus type 1 vectors harboring gag, pol, and env genes can be used to rescue defective retrovirus vectors.J Virol. 1997 May;71(5):4111-7. doi: 10.1128/JVI.71.5.4111-4117.1997. J Virol. 1997. PMID: 9094692 Free PMC article.
-
Generation of stable retrovirus packaging cell lines after transduction with herpes simplex virus hybrid amplicon vectors.J Gene Med. 2002 May-Jun;4(3):229-39. doi: 10.1002/jgm.276. J Gene Med. 2002. PMID: 12112640
-
A safe packaging line for gene transfer: separating viral genes on two different plasmids.J Virol. 1988 Apr;62(4):1120-4. doi: 10.1128/JVI.62.4.1120-1124.1988. J Virol. 1988. PMID: 2831375 Free PMC article.
-
Safety considerations in vector development.Somat Cell Mol Genet. 2001 Nov;26(1-6):147-58. doi: 10.1023/a:1021082815013. Somat Cell Mol Genet. 2001. PMID: 12465466 Review.
-
Gene delivery by lentivirus vectors an overview.Methods Mol Biol. 2004;246:367-90. doi: 10.1385/1-59259-650-9:367. Methods Mol Biol. 2004. PMID: 14970605 Review.
Cited by
-
HSV-1 amplicon vectors launch the production of heterologous rotavirus-like particles and induce rotavirus-specific immune responses in mice.Mol Ther. 2012 Sep;20(9):1810-1820. doi: 10.1038/mt.2012.108. Epub 2012 Jun 19. Mol Ther. 2012. PMID: 22713696 Free PMC article.
References
-
- Bilang-Bleuel A, Revah F, Colin P, Locquet I, Robert JJ, Mallet J, Horellou P. Intrastriatal injection of an adenoviral vector expressing glial-cell-line-derived neurotrophic factor prevents dopaminergic neuron degeneration and behavioral impairment in a rat model of Parkinson disease. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 1997;94(16):8818–8823. doi: 10.1073/pnas.94.16.8818. - DOI - PMC - PubMed
-
- Carlson BM. Regeneration of entire squeletal muscle. Federation Proceedings. 1986;45(5):1456–1460. - PubMed
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources