scholarly journals Adenoviral gene transfer of a single‐chain IL‐23 induces psoriatic arthritis–like symptoms in NOD mice

2019 ◽  
Vol 33 (8) ◽  
pp. 9505-9515 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael R. Flores ◽  
Lana Carbo ◽  
Eun Kim ◽  
Montina Van Meter ◽  
Consuelo M. Lopez De Padilla ◽  
...  
2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rafael R. Flores ◽  
Lana Carbo ◽  
Eun Kim ◽  
Montina Van Meter ◽  
Consuelo M. Lopez De Padilla ◽  
...  

Hypertension ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 36 (suppl_1) ◽  
pp. 691-691
Author(s):  
Stuart A Nicklin ◽  
Steve J White ◽  
Andrew H Baker

75 Current gene transfer vectors are extremely limited for selective vascular cell delivery due to their promiscuous tropism and low efficiency of gene delivery to the vasculature. We have sought to improve the efficiency of gene transfer to vascular endothelial cells using phage display. Using bio-panning on whole cells, we have isolated a panel of 60 7-mer peptides that have the ability to bind endothelial cells but not to non-endothelial cells including vascular smooth muscle cells and hepatocytes. One candidate peptide was cloned upstream of a single chain antibody (scFv) generated against the knob domain of adenovirus type 5, expressed in bacteria and purified. While the scFv alone inhibited adenoviral fiber-dependent infection of all cell types tested (to >95% in hepatocytes), the scFv-peptide fusion mediated selective infection into endothelial cells without infection into non-endothelial cells types. Furthermore, the level of infection achieved in endothelial cells was 15 fold higher than that achieved with fiber-mediated gene transfer alone. We have additionally isolated 15 individual peptides that have the ability to target the endothelial leptin-like oxidised LDL receptor (LOX-1), a receptor highly expressed in endothelial cells in hypertensive models and in atherosclerotic lesions, by phage bio-panning on cells ectopically expressing the LOX-1 receptor. Candidate peptides mediated significantly higher binding to LOX-1 expressing cells compared to LOX-1 negative cells. Their ability to re-target adenoviral gene transfer is being tested. Our results demonstrate that small, novel peptides isolated by phage display have the ability to retarget gene transfer selectively and efficiently to vascular endothelial cells. This has important implications for targeting gene transfer to endothelial cells for molecular and therapeutic protocols in hypertension.


Vaccine ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 21 (19-20) ◽  
pp. 2268-2272 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joana G. Brandão ◽  
Rik J. Scheper ◽  
Sinéad M. Lougheed ◽  
David T. Curiel ◽  
Bryan W. Tillman ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 76 (6) ◽  
pp. 2753-2762 ◽  
Author(s):  
Victor W. van Beusechem ◽  
Jacques Grill ◽  
D. C. Jeroen Mastenbroek ◽  
Thomas J. Wickham ◽  
Peter W. Roelvink ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The application of adenoviral vectors in cancer gene therapy is hampered by low receptor expression on tumor cells and high receptor expression on normal epithelial cells. Targeting adenoviral vectors toward tumor cells may improve cancer gene therapy procedures by providing augmented tumor transduction and decreased toxicity to normal tissues. Targeting requires both the complete abolition of native tropism and the addition of a new specific binding ligand onto the viral capsid. Here we accomplished this by using doubly ablated adenoviral vectors, lacking coxsackievirus-adenovirus receptor and αv integrin binding capacities, together with bispecific single-chain antibodies targeted toward human epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) or the epithelial cell adhesion molecule. These vectors efficiently and selectively targeted both alternative receptors on the surface of human cancer cells. Targeted doubly ablated adenoviral vectors were also very efficient and specific with primary human tumor specimens. With primary glioma cell cultures, EGFR targeting augmented the median gene transfer efficiency of doubly ablated adenoviral vectors 123-fold. Moreover, EGFR-targeted doubly ablated vectors were selective for human brain tumors versus the surrounding normal brain tissue. They transduced organotypic glioma and meningioma spheroids with efficiencies similar to those of native adenoviral vectors, while exhibiting greater-than-10-fold-reduced background levels on normal brain explants from the same patients. As a result, EGFR-targeted doubly ablated adenoviral vectors had a 5- to 38-fold-improved tumor-to-normal brain targeting index compared to native vectors. Hence, single-chain targeted doubly ablated adenoviral vectors are promising tools for cancer gene therapy. They should provide an improved therapeutic index with efficient tumor transduction and effective protection of normal tissue.


2006 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-174 ◽  
Author(s):  
J??rgen Siebler ◽  
Ulrike Protzer ◽  
Stefan Wirtz ◽  
Marcus Schuchmann ◽  
Thomas H??hler ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document