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Intra-amniotic delivery of CFTR-expressing adenovirus does not reverse cystic fibrosis phenotype in inbred CFTR-knockout mice
Authors
A Bergau
Alton
+58 more
AW Cuthbert
Bigger
Boyle
Buckley
C Coutelle
Caplen
Colledge
Coutelle
Cuthbert
David
David
Davies
Dormer
Douar
Dupont
Gill
Gregory
Gregory
Guy-Crotte
Harvey
Hay
Holzinger
Hyde
Kashiwagi
Khatri
Kitson
Kobayashi
Konstan
Larson
Larson
Larson
LJ MacVinish
M Themis
Maizel
Morrow
Moss
Peebles
Ratcliff
Ross
Rozmahel
Rucker
S Jezzard
Schneider
Shen
SN Waddington
Snouwaert
Stratford-Perricaudet
Suzanne MK Buckley
Themis
Verhaeghe
Waddington
Waddington
Waddington
Waddington
Wang
WH Colledge
Zabner
Zuckerman
Publication date
3 April 2008
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Abstract
This article is available open access through the publisher’s website at the link below. Copyright © 2008 The American Society of Gene Therapy.Due to its early onset and severe prognosis, cystic fibrosis (CF) has been suggested as a candidate disease for in utero gene therapy. In 1997, a study was published claiming that to how transient prenatal expression of CF transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) from an in utero –injected adenovirus vector could achieve permanent reversal of the CF intestinal pathology in adult CF knockout mice, despite the loss of CFTR transgene expression by birth. This would imply that the underlying cause of CF is a prenatal defect for which lifelong cure can be achieved by transient prenatal expression of CFTR. Despite criticism at the time of publication, no independent verification of this contentious finding has been published so far. This is vital for the development of future therapeutic strategies as it may determine whether CF gene therapy should be performed prenatally or postnatally. We therefore reinvestigated this finding with an identical adenoviral vector and a knockout CF mouse line (CftrtmlCam) with a completely inbred genetic background to eliminate any effects due to genetic variation. After delivery of the CFTR-expressing adenovirus to the fetal mouse, both vector DNA and transgenic CFTR expression were detected in treated animals postpartum but statistically no significant difference in survival was observed between the Cftr–/– mice treated with the CFTR-adenovirus and those treated with the control vector.Sport Aiding Medical Research for Kids, the Cystic Fibrosis Trust, and the Katharine Dormandy Trust
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oai:bura.brunel.ac.uk:2438/892...
Last time updated on 19/09/2014
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Last time updated on 01/04/2019