Ultrasound directs a transposase system for durable hepatic gene delivery in mice.
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ABSTRACT: Our aim was to evaluate the delivery of transposase-based vectors by ultrasound targeted microbubble destruction (UTMD) in mice. DNA vectors were attached to cationic lipid microbubbles (1-3 ?m in diameter), injected intravenously and delivered to the liver by destruction of the carrier bubbles with ultrasound in burst mode at 1.0 MHz, 20-?s pulse duration, 10-Hz pulse repetition frequency and ?1.3-MPa acoustic peak negative pressure. We evaluated the expression and genomic integration of conventional (pcDNA3) and piggyBac transposase-based (pmGENIE) reporter vectors. In vivo, we observed UTMD-mediated liver-specific expression of pmGENIE for an average of 24 d, compared with 4 d with pcDNA3. Reporter expression was located predominately near blood vessels initially, whereas expression after 3 d was more evenly distributed through the parenchyma of the liver. We confirmed random genomic integration for pmGENIE in vitro; however, integration events for pmGENIE in vivo were targeted to specific areas of chromosome 14. Our results suggest that a combination of UTMD and non-viral DNA transposase vectors can mediate weeks of hepatic-specific gene transfer in vivo, and analyses performed by non-restrictive linear amplification-mediated (nrLAM) polymerase chain reaction, cloning and sequencing identify an unexpected tropism for integration within a specific sequence on chromosome 14 in mice. UTMD delivery of transgenes may be useful for the treatment of hepatic gene deficiency disorders.
SUBMITTER: Anderson CD
PROVIDER: S-EPMC3838570 | biostudies-literature | 2013 Dec
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
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