학술논문

β-Galactosidase staining following intracoronary infusion of cationic liposomes in the in vivo rabbit heart is produced by microinfarction rather than effective gene transfer: a cautionary tale.
Document Type
Article
Source
Gene Therapy. Mar1998, Vol. 5 Issue 3, p301. 8p.
Subject
*INFARCTION
*GALACTOSE
*LIPOSOMES
*HEART
*RABBIT physiology
Language
ISSN
0969-7128
Abstract
The myocardium is a potential target for the expression of exogenous genes to treat inherited and acquired diseases. Although adenovirus-mediated gene transfer has resulted in high-level gene transfer in vivo via direct intramyocardial injection and via a percutaneous intra-arterial route, the time-course of gene expression is limited by host immune responses. It was the aim of this study to test whether cationic liposome-mediated gene transfer, which does not suffer from the aforementioned problems, was feasible in the adult rabbit myocardium via a percutaneous transluminal approach. Doses of plasmid DNA encoding lacZ from 200–800 μg complexed to cationic liposomes resulted in X-gal conversion at day 3 with associated myocardial damage. We hypothesised that the damage was associated with macro-aggregates of cationic liposomes–DNA occluding the microcirculation. When such aggregates were excluded no X-gal conversion was seen in vivo. In order to show that X-gal conversion occurs in areas of infarction in the myocardium we caused closed chest infarction by deploying a platinum micro-embolisation coil in the circumflex coronary artery. At day 3 X-gal conversion was observed in the territory supplied by the occluded artery. Thus, microinfarction causes the false positive appearance of gene transfer when using a lacZ reporter gene. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]