Green Fluorescent Protein in Retroviral Vector Constructs as Marker and Reporter of Gene Expression for Cell and Gene Therapy Applications

2003 ◽  
pp. 353-371 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicoletta Eliopoulos ◽  
Jacques Galipeau
2019 ◽  
Vol 112 (6) ◽  
pp. 617-627
Author(s):  
Tereza Andreou ◽  
Nora Rippaus ◽  
Krzysztof Wronski ◽  
Jennifer Williams ◽  
David Taggart ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Brain metastases (BrM) develop in 20–40% of cancer patients and represent an unmet clinical need. Limited access of drugs into the brain because of the blood-brain barrier is at least partially responsible for therapeutic failure, necessitating improved drug delivery systems. Methods Green fluorescent protein (GFP)-transduced murine and nontransduced human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) were administered into mice (n = 10 and 3). The HSC progeny in mouse BrM and in patient-derived BrM tissue (n = 6) was characterized by flow cytometry and immunofluorescence. Promoters driving gene expression, specifically within the BrM-infiltrating HSC progeny, were identified through differential gene-expression analysis and subsequent validation of a series of promoter-green fluorescent protein-reporter constructs in mice (n = 5). One of the promoters was used to deliver tumor necrosis factor–related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) to BrM in mice (n = 17/21 for TRAIL vs control group). Results HSC progeny (consisting mostly of macrophages) efficiently homed to macrometastases (mean [SD] = 37.6% [7.2%] of all infiltrating cells for murine HSC progeny; 27.9% mean [SD] = 27.9% [4.9%] of infiltrating CD45+ hematopoietic cells for human HSC progeny) and micrometastases in mice (19.3–53.3% of all macrophages for murine HSCs). Macrophages were also abundant in patient-derived BrM tissue (mean [SD] = 8.8% [7.8%]). Collectively, this provided a rationale to optimize the delivery of gene therapy to BrM within myeloid cells. MMP14 promoter emerged as the strongest promoter construct capable of limiting gene expression to BrM-infiltrating myeloid cells in mice. TRAIL delivered under MMP14 promoter statistically significantly prolonged survival in mice (mean [SD] = 19.0 [3.4] vs mean [SD] = 15.0 [2.0] days for TRAIL vs control group; two-sided P = .006), demonstrating therapeutic and translational potential of our approach. Conclusions Our study establishes HSC gene therapy using a myeloid cell–specific promoter as a new strategy to target BrM. This approach, with strong translational value, has potential to overcome the blood-brain barrier, target micrometastases, and control multifocal lesions.


2003 ◽  
pp. 245-260
Author(s):  
Laura E. Via ◽  
Subramanian Dhandayuthapani ◽  
Dusanka Deretic ◽  
V. Deretic

Blood ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 90 (9) ◽  
pp. 3304-3315 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marti F.A. Bierhuizen ◽  
Yvonne Westerman ◽  
Trudi P. Visser ◽  
Wati Dimjati ◽  
Albertus W. Wognum ◽  
...  

Abstract The further improvement of gene transfer into hematopoietic stem cells and their direct progeny will be greatly facilitated by markers that allow rapid detection and efficient selection of successfully transduced cells. For this purpose, a retroviral vector was designed and tested encoding a recombinant version of the Aequorea victoria green fluorescent protein that is enhanced for high-level expression in mammalian cells (EGFP). Murine cell lines (NIH 3T3, Rat2) and bone marrow cells transduced with this retroviral vector demonstrated a stable green fluorescence signal readily detectable by flow cytometry. Functional analysis of the retrovirally transduced bone marrow cells showed EGFP expression in in vitro clonogenic progenitors (GM-CFU), day 13 colony-forming unit-spleen (CFU-S), and in peripheral blood cells and marrow repopulating cells of transplanted mice. In conjunction with fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) techniques EGFP expression could be used as a marker to select for greater than 95% pure populations of transduced cells and to phenotypically define the transduced cells using antibodies directed against specific cell-surface antigens. Detrimental effects of EGFP expression were not observed: fluorescence intensity appeared to be stable and hematopoietic cell growth was not impaired. The data show the feasibility of using EGFP as a convenient and rapid reporter to monitor retroviral-mediated gene transfer and expression in hematopoietic cells, to select for the genetically modified cells, and to track these cells and their progeny both in vitro and in vivo.


1999 ◽  
Vol 67 (4) ◽  
pp. 1812-1820
Author(s):  
Maurizio del Poeta ◽  
Dena L. Toffaletti ◽  
Thomas H. Rude ◽  
Sara D. Sparks ◽  
Joseph Heitman ◽  
...  

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