CENTRIFUGAL ENHANCEMENT OF RETROVIRAL-MEDIATED GENE-TRANSFER

被引:178
作者
BAHNSON, AB
DUNIGAN, JT
BAYSAL, BE
MOHNEY, T
ATCHISON, RW
NIMGAONKAR, MT
BALL, ED
BARRANGER, JA
机构
[1] UNIV PITTSBURGH,MED CTR,MAGEE WOMENS RES INST,PITTSBURGH,PA
[2] UNIV PITTSBURGH,MED CTR,DIV HEMATOL BONE MARROW TRANSPLANTAT,PITTSBURGH,PA
关键词
CENTRIFUGAL ENHANCEMENT; RETROVIRAL GENE TRANSFER; TRANSDUCTION EFFICIENCY; GENE THERAPY;
D O I
10.1016/0166-0934(95)00035-S
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Centrifugation has been used for many years to enhance infection of cultured cells with a variety of different types of viruses, but it has only recently been demonstrated to be effective for retroviruses (Ho et al. (1993) J. Leukocyte Biol. 53, 208-212; Kotani et al. (1994) Hum. Gene Ther. 5, 19-28). Centrifugation was investigated as a means of increasing the transduction of a retroviral vector for gene transfer into cells with the potential for transplantation and engraftment in human patients suffering from genetic disease, i.e., gene therapy. It was found that centrifugation significantly increased the rate of transduction into adherent murine fibroblasts and into non-adherent human hematopoietic cells, including primary CD34+ enriched cells. The latter samples include cells capable of reconstitution of hematopoiesis in myeloablated patients. As a step toward optimization of this method, it was shown that effective transduction is: (1) achieved at room temperature; (2) directly related to time of centrifugation and to relative centrifugal force up to 10,000 g; (3) independent of volume of supernatant for volumes greater than or equal to 0.5 ml using non-adherent cell targets in test tubes, but dependent upon volume for coverage of adherent cell targets in flat bottom plates; and (4) inversely related to cell numbers per tube using non-adherent cells. The results support the proposal that centrifugation increases the reversible binding of virus to the cells, and together with results reported by Hodgkin et al. (Hodgkin et al. (1988) J. Virol. Methods 22, 215-230), these data support a model in which the centrifugal field counteracts forces of diffusion which lead to dissociation during the reversible phase of binding.
引用
收藏
页码:131 / 143
页数:13
相关论文
共 16 条
[1]  
BAHNSON AB, 1994, GENE THER, V1, P176
[2]  
CEPKO C, 1992, CURRENT PROTOCOLS S, V17
[3]   SAFE AND EFFICIENT GENERATION OF RECOMBINANT RETROVIRUSES WITH AMPHOTROPIC AND ECOTROPIC HOST RANGES [J].
DANOS, O ;
MULLIGAN, RC .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1988, 85 (17) :6460-6464
[4]   GENETIC MARKING SHOWS THAT PH(+) CELLS PRESENT IN AUTOLOGOUS TRANSPLANTS OF CHRONIC MYELOGENOUS LEUKEMIA (CML) CONTRIBUTE TO RELAPSE AFTER AUTOLOGOUS BONE-MARROW IN CML [J].
DEISSEROTH, AB ;
ZU, ZF ;
CLAXTON, D ;
HANANIA, EG ;
FU, SQ ;
ELLERSON, D ;
GOLDBERG, L ;
THOMAS, M ;
JANICEK, K ;
ANDERSON, WF ;
HESTER, J ;
KORBLING, M ;
DURETT, A ;
MOEN, R ;
BERENSON, R ;
HEIMFELD, S ;
HAMER, J ;
CALVERT, L ;
TIBBITS, P ;
TALPAZ, M ;
KANTARJIAN, H ;
CHAMPLIN, R ;
READING, C .
BLOOD, 1994, 83 (10) :3068-3076
[5]  
DUNBAR CE, 1993, BLOOD, V82, pA217
[6]   CENTRIFUGAL ENHANCEMENT OF HUMAN-IMMUNODEFICIENCY-VIRUS TYPE-1 INFECTION AND HUMAN CYTOMEGALOVIRUS GENE-EXPRESSION IN HUMAN PRIMARY MONOCYTE MACROPHAGES INVITRO [J].
HO, WZ ;
CHERUKURI, R ;
GE, SD ;
CUTILLI, JR ;
SONG, L ;
WHITKO, S ;
DOUGLAS, SD .
JOURNAL OF LEUKOCYTE BIOLOGY, 1993, 53 (02) :208-212
[7]   MURINE CYTOMEGALO-VIRUS BINDS REVERSIBLY TO MOUSE EMBRYO FIBROBLASTS - IMPLICATIONS FOR QUANTITATION AND EXPLANATION OF CENTRIFUGAL ENHANCEMENT [J].
HODGKIN, PD ;
SCALZO, AA ;
SWAMINATHAN, N ;
PRICE, P ;
SHELLAM, GR .
JOURNAL OF VIROLOGICAL METHODS, 1988, 22 (2-3) :215-230
[8]  
HOOGERBRUGGE PM, 1993, BLOOD, V82, pA315
[10]   ESTABLISHMENT AND CHARACTERIZATION OF A UNIQUE HUMAN CELL-LINE THAT PROLIFERATES DEPENDENTLY ON GM-CSF, IL-3, OR ERYTHROPOIETIN [J].
KITAMURA, T ;
TANGE, T ;
TERASAWA, T ;
CHIBA, S ;
KUWAKI, T ;
MIYAGAWA, K ;
PIAO, YF ;
MIYAZONO, K ;
URABE, A ;
TAKAKU, F .
JOURNAL OF CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY, 1989, 140 (02) :323-334