70 research outputs found

    Comparison of single regulated lentiviral vectors with rtTA expression driven by an autoregulatory loop or a constitutive promoter

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    Regulated expression of a therapeutic gene is crucial for safe and efficacious gene therapy. Many inducible regulatory systems use a constitutive promoter to express a regulatory protein, such as rtTA in the Tet-On system, which may restrict their use because of cytotoxicity and immunogenicity. Autoregulatory expression of rtTA provides extremely low levels of rtTA when transgene expression is off, with rapid transgene induction upon addition of doxycycline. Lentiviral vectors efficiently transfer genes to dividing and non-dividing cells with long-term gene expression both in vitro and in vivo. We compared regulatory function in a single lentiviral vector where rtTA was either expressed from a constitutive promoter or placed in an autoregulatory loop. Autoregulatory expression of rtTA was superior to constitutive promoter expression, resulting in higher viral titers, undetectable levels of both rtTA and transgene expression in the absence of doxycycline, improved induction kinetics and increased induction levels in all cells tested. We further expanded the utility of the autoregulatory vector by using an improved rtTA variant with an increased sensitivity to doxycycline. This lentiviral vector with doxycycline-regulated transgene expression may be useful for gene therapy applications and in experimental settings where strict temporal expression of a transgene is required

    Reduction of liver macrophage transduction by pseudotyping lentiviral vectors with a fusion envelope from Autographa californica GP64 and Sendai virus F2 domain

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Lentiviral vectors are well suited for gene therapy because they can mediate long-term expression in both dividing and nondividing cells. However, lentiviral vectors seem less suitable for liver gene therapy because systemically administered lentiviral vectors are preferentially sequestered by liver macrophages. This results in a reduction of available virus and might also increase the immune response to the vector and vector products.</p> <p>Reduction of macrophage sequestration is therefore essential for efficient lentiviral liver gene therapy.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Fusions were made of <it>Autographa californica </it>GP64 and the hepatocyte specific Sendai Virus envelope proteins. Lentiviral vectors were produced with either wild type GP64, Sendai-GP64, or both wild type GP64 and Sendai-GP64 and tested <it>in vitro </it>and <it>in vivo </it>for hepatocyte and macrophage gene transfer.</p> <p>Sendai-GP64 pseudotyped vectors showed specific gene transfer to HepG2 hepatoma cells, with no detectable transduction of HeLa cervical carcinoma cells, and a decreased affinity for RAW mouse macrophages. Co-expression of wild type GP64 and Sendai-GP64 resulted in improved viral titers while retaining increased affinity for HepG2 cells.</p> <p>In vivo, the Sendai-GP64 vectors also showed decreased transduction of murine liver macrophages.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>We demonstrate reduced macrophage transduction <it>in vitro </it>and <it>in vivo </it>with GP64/Sendai chimeric envelope proteins.</p

    Alteration of viral lipid composition by expression of the phospholipid floppase ABCB4 reduces HIV vector infectivity

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>The presence of cholesterol in the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) lipid envelop is important for viral function as cholesterol depleted viral particles show reduced infectivity. However, it is less well established whether other viral membrane lipids are also important for HIV infection.</p> <p>The ABCB4 protein is a phosphatidyl choline (PC) floppase that mediates transport of PC from the inner to the outer membrane leaflet. This property enabled us to modulate the lipid composition of HIV vectors and study the effects on membrane composition and infection efficiency.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>Virus generated in the presence of ABCB4 was enriched in PC and cholesterol but contained less sphingomyelin (SM). Viral titers were reduced 5.9 fold. These effects were not observed with an inactive ABCB4 mutant. The presence of the ABC transport inhibitor verapamil abolished the effect of ABCB4 expression on viral titers.</p> <p>The ABCB4 mediated reduction in infectivity was caused by changes in the viral particles and not by components co purified with the virus because virus made in the presence of ABCB4 did not inhibit virus made without ABCB4 in a competition assay.</p> <p>Incorporation of the envelope protein was not affected by the expression of ABCB4. The inhibitory effect of ABCB4 was independent of the viral envelope as the effect was observed with two different envelope proteins.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Our data indicate that increasing the PC content of HIV particles reduces infectivity.</p

    Separating Lentiviral Vector Injection and Induction of Gene Expression in Time, Does Not Prevent an Immune Response to rtTA in Rats

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    BACKGROUND: Lentiviral gene transfer can provide long-term expression of therapeutic genes such as erythropoietin. Because overexpression of erythropoietin can be toxic, regulated expression is needed. Doxycycline inducible vectors can regulate expression of therapeutic transgenes efficiently. However, because they express an immunogenic transactivator (rtTA), their utility for gene therapy is limited. In addition to immunogenic proteins that are expressed from inducible vectors, injection of the vector itself is likely to elicit an immune response because viral capsid proteins will induce "danger signals" that trigger an innate response and recruit inflammatory cells. METHODOLOGY AND PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We have developed an autoregulatory lentiviral vector in which basal expression of rtTA is very low. This enabled us to temporally separate the injection of virus and the expression of the therapeutic gene and rtTA. Wistar rats were injected with an autoregulatory rat erythropoietin expression vector. Two or six weeks after injection, erythropoietin expression was induced by doxycycline. This resulted in an increase of the hematocrit, irrespective of the timing of the induction. However, most rats only responded once to doxycycline administration. Antibodies against rtTA were detected in the early and late induction groups. CONCLUSIONS: Our results suggest that, even when viral vector capsid proteins have disappeared, expression of foreign proteins in muscle will lead to an immune respons

    Exclusive enteral nutrition mediates gut microbial and metabolic changes that are associated with remission in children with Crohn’s disease

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    GD and AWW receive core funding support from the Scottish Government’s Rural and Environmental Science and Analytical Services (RESAS) Division. JW was funded by the Wellcome Trust [Grant No. 098051]. JVL is funded by MRC New Investigator Grant (MR/P002536/1) and ERC Starting Grant (715662). JK is funded by NIHR: II-OL-1116-10027, NIH: R01-CA204403-01A1, Horizon H2020: ITN GROWTH. Imperial Biomedical Research Centre, SAGES research grant. Infrastructure support for this research was provided by the NIHR Imperial biomedical Research Centre (BRC). Microbiota analyses were carried out using the Maxwell computer cluster at the University of Aberdeen. We thank the Illumina MiSeq team at the Wellcome Sanger Institute for their assistance. This work was partially described in the Ph.D. thesis of KD (Retrieved 2020, Pediatric inflammatory bowel disease Monitoring, nutrition and surgery, https://pure.uva.nl/ws/files/23176012/Thesis_complete_.pdf).Peer reviewedPublisher PD

    A diet containing the soy phytoestrogen genistein causes infertility in female rats partially deficient in UDP glucuronyltransferase

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    Soy beans contain genistein, a natural compound that has estrogenic effects because it binds the estrogen receptor with relatively high affinity. Genistein is therefore the most important environmental estrogen in the human diet. Detoxification of genistein is mediated through conjugation by UDP-glucuronyltransferase 1 and 2 (UGT1 and UGT2) isoenzymes. Gunn rats have a genetic deficiency in UGT1 activity, UGT2 activities are not affected. Because our Gunn rats stopped breeding after the animal chow was changed to a type with much higher soy content, we examined the mechanism behind this soy diet induced infertility. Gunn and control rats were fed diets with and without genistein. In these rats, plasma levels of genistein and metabolites, fertility and reproductive parameters were determined. Enzyme assays showed reduced genistein UGT activity in Gunn rats, as compared to wild type rats. Female Gunn rats were completely infertile on a genistein diet, wild type rats were fertile. Genistein diet caused a persistent estrus, lowered serum progesterone and inhibited development of corpora lutea in Gunn rats. Concentrations of total genistein in Gunn and control rat plasma were identical and within the range observed in humans after soy consumption. However, Gunn rat plasma contained 25% unconjugated genistein, compared to 3.6% in control rats. This study shows that, under conditions of reduced glucuronidation, dietary genistein exhibits a strongly increased estrogenic effect. Because polymorphisms that reduce UGT1 expression are prevalent in the human population, these results suggest a cautionary attitude towards the consumption of large amounts of soy or soy supplements. (c) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserve

    Unedited inhibition of HBV replication by APOBEC3G

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    Lynch syndrome: the patients' perspective

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    People with Lynch syndrome have a high lifetime risk for the development of colorectal, endometrial and several other types of cancer. Lynch syndrome is caused by germline mutations in genes encoding DNA mismatch repair proteins. In this review, issues that concern Lynch patients are highlighted from the patients' perspective. Both authors are affected by Lynch syndrome and are active in Lynch patient organizations. The goal of this review is to assist heath care providers in the improvement of care for individuals who share our disorder. Institutional and/or national guidelines that should lead to the identification of Lynch patients have been developed in many countries. However, adherence to these guidelines is poor and the consequence is severe underdiagnosis of Lynch syndrome. An important task of patient organizations is therefore to increase awareness of Lynch syndrome among the general public and health care providers. Because diagnosis of Lynch syndrome based on family history is difficult, the use of molecular and or histological techniques that permit unequivocal diagnosis should be more aggressively promoted. Since Lynch syndrome encompasses a broad spectrum of cancers, a multidisciplinary treatment and screening protocol for all Lynch patients is necessary. Lynch patients must be seen by a team of specialists that are knowledgeable in the various manifestations of Lynch syndrome. Because tumors with mismatch repair deficiency have specific properties, identification of effective chemotherapy regimens, specifically targeted to patients with deficiencies in DNA repair mechanisms, must be developed. The high lifetime risk of developing cancer in Lynch patients warrants lifestyle advice and research into chemopreventive measures that reduce the risk of cancer in this vulnerable group. Implementation of these recommendations will result in greatly improved quality of life for people affected with Lynch syndrome, it is therefore important that health care providers and patient organizations work together to achieve these goal

    Bilirubin, the Gold Within

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    When heme containing proteins such as hemoglobin and cytochrome P450 are degraded, their prosthetic groups cannot be metabolised and have to be excreted. Elimination of heme could be considered straightforward detoxification but a large body of evidence shows that this pathway plays a role in various physiological processes as well. The first step in the catabolism of heme is cleavage of the porphyrin ring by heme oxygenase, this reaction yields biliverdin, carbon monoxide and Iron. Two heme oxygenase (HO) isoforms mediate this process, constitutively expressed HO-2 and inducible HO-1. Many cell types express heme oxygenase, with high expression present in cells of the reticuloendothelial system involved in degradation of erythrocytes(1). The first step in heme catabolism has attracted considerable interest since heme oxygenase activity is involved in the regulation of processes such as arthrosclerosis, inflammation and diabetes1. This regulation is mediated by the products of heme oxygenase action on heme, with the potent signalling molecule carbon monoxide likely playing a major role(1
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