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Stent-based delivery of adeno-associated viral vectors with sustained vascular transduction and iNOS-mediated inhibition of in-stent restenosis

In-stent restenosis remains an important clinical problem in the era of drug eluting stents. Development of clinical gene therapy protocols for the prevention and treatment of in-stent restenosis is hampered by the lack of adequate local delivery systems. Herein we describe a novel stent-based gene...

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Autores principales: Fishbein, Ilia, Guerrero, David T., Alferiev, Ivan S., Foster, Jonathan B., Minutolo, Nicholas G., Chorny, Michael, Mas Monteys, Alejandro, Driesbaugh, Kathryn H., Nagaswami, Chandrasekaran, Levy, Robert J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5709213/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28832561
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/gt.2017.82
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author Fishbein, Ilia
Guerrero, David T.
Alferiev, Ivan S.
Foster, Jonathan B.
Minutolo, Nicholas G.
Chorny, Michael
Mas Monteys, Alejandro
Driesbaugh, Kathryn H.
Nagaswami, Chandrasekaran
Levy, Robert J.
author_facet Fishbein, Ilia
Guerrero, David T.
Alferiev, Ivan S.
Foster, Jonathan B.
Minutolo, Nicholas G.
Chorny, Michael
Mas Monteys, Alejandro
Driesbaugh, Kathryn H.
Nagaswami, Chandrasekaran
Levy, Robert J.
author_sort Fishbein, Ilia
collection PubMed
description In-stent restenosis remains an important clinical problem in the era of drug eluting stents. Development of clinical gene therapy protocols for the prevention and treatment of in-stent restenosis is hampered by the lack of adequate local delivery systems. Herein we describe a novel stent-based gene delivery platform capable of providing local arterial gene transfer with adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors. This system exploits the natural affinity of protein G (PrG) to bind to the Fc region of mammalian IgG, making PrG a universal adaptor for surface immobilization of vector-capturing antibodies (Ab). Our results: 1) demonstrate the feasibility of reversible immobilization of AAV2 vectors using vector tethering by AAV2-specific Ab appended to the stent surface through covalently attached PrG, 2) show sustained release kinetics of PrG/Ab-immobilized AAV2 vector particles into simulated physiological medium in vitro and site-specific transduction of cultured cells, 3) provide evidence of long-term (12 weeks) arterial expression of luciferase with PrG/Ab-tethered AAV2(Luc), and 4) show anti-proliferative activity and anti-restenotic efficacy of stent-immobilized AAV2(iNOS) in the rat carotid artery model of stent angioplasty.
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spelling pubmed-57092132018-02-23 Stent-based delivery of adeno-associated viral vectors with sustained vascular transduction and iNOS-mediated inhibition of in-stent restenosis Fishbein, Ilia Guerrero, David T. Alferiev, Ivan S. Foster, Jonathan B. Minutolo, Nicholas G. Chorny, Michael Mas Monteys, Alejandro Driesbaugh, Kathryn H. Nagaswami, Chandrasekaran Levy, Robert J. Gene Ther Article In-stent restenosis remains an important clinical problem in the era of drug eluting stents. Development of clinical gene therapy protocols for the prevention and treatment of in-stent restenosis is hampered by the lack of adequate local delivery systems. Herein we describe a novel stent-based gene delivery platform capable of providing local arterial gene transfer with adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors. This system exploits the natural affinity of protein G (PrG) to bind to the Fc region of mammalian IgG, making PrG a universal adaptor for surface immobilization of vector-capturing antibodies (Ab). Our results: 1) demonstrate the feasibility of reversible immobilization of AAV2 vectors using vector tethering by AAV2-specific Ab appended to the stent surface through covalently attached PrG, 2) show sustained release kinetics of PrG/Ab-immobilized AAV2 vector particles into simulated physiological medium in vitro and site-specific transduction of cultured cells, 3) provide evidence of long-term (12 weeks) arterial expression of luciferase with PrG/Ab-tethered AAV2(Luc), and 4) show anti-proliferative activity and anti-restenotic efficacy of stent-immobilized AAV2(iNOS) in the rat carotid artery model of stent angioplasty. 2017-08-23 2017-11 /pmc/articles/PMC5709213/ /pubmed/28832561 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/gt.2017.82 Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use: http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Fishbein, Ilia
Guerrero, David T.
Alferiev, Ivan S.
Foster, Jonathan B.
Minutolo, Nicholas G.
Chorny, Michael
Mas Monteys, Alejandro
Driesbaugh, Kathryn H.
Nagaswami, Chandrasekaran
Levy, Robert J.
Stent-based delivery of adeno-associated viral vectors with sustained vascular transduction and iNOS-mediated inhibition of in-stent restenosis
title Stent-based delivery of adeno-associated viral vectors with sustained vascular transduction and iNOS-mediated inhibition of in-stent restenosis
title_full Stent-based delivery of adeno-associated viral vectors with sustained vascular transduction and iNOS-mediated inhibition of in-stent restenosis
title_fullStr Stent-based delivery of adeno-associated viral vectors with sustained vascular transduction and iNOS-mediated inhibition of in-stent restenosis
title_full_unstemmed Stent-based delivery of adeno-associated viral vectors with sustained vascular transduction and iNOS-mediated inhibition of in-stent restenosis
title_short Stent-based delivery of adeno-associated viral vectors with sustained vascular transduction and iNOS-mediated inhibition of in-stent restenosis
title_sort stent-based delivery of adeno-associated viral vectors with sustained vascular transduction and inos-mediated inhibition of in-stent restenosis
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5709213/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28832561
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/gt.2017.82
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