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Efficient lentiviral transduction of Herpesvirus saimiri immortalized T cells as a model for gene therapy in primary immunodeficiencies

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Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/101732
DOI: 10.1038/sj.gt.3302259
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Auteur
Toscano, Miguel; Frecha, Cecilia; Ortega, C.; Santamaría, Manuel; Martín, Francisco; Molina Pineda Infantas, Ignacio Jesús
Editorial
Springer Nature
Materia
gene therapy
 
vectors
 
Lentiviral vectors
 
T cells
 
Heresvirus saimiri
 
model
 
Date
2004
Referencia bibliográfica
Toscano, M., Frecha, C., Ortega, C. et al. Efficient lentiviral transduction of Herpesvirus saimiri immortalized T cells as a model for gene therapy in primary immunodeficiencies. Gene Ther 11, 956–961 (2004). https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.gt.3302259
Patrocinador
European Union QLT-1999-01090; Spanish Ministry of Health FIS01/3143; Spanish Ministry of Education and Culture
Résumé
Infection of human T lymphocytes with the Herpesvirus saimiri (HVS) yields immortalized T-cell lines (HVS-T) which retain all the phenotypical and functional characteristics of their parental cells. This represents a new experimental model for studying genetic disorders of T lymphocytes. In spite of the efforts of many laboratories, no satisfactory way has been found so far to modify HVS-T cells genetically. We have analyzed the capacity of oncoretroviral (MLV)- and lentiviral (HIV-1)-based vectors pseudotyped with vesicular stomatitis virus glycoprotein (VSVg) to transduce HVS-T cells. HIV-1-derived vectors efficiently transduced HVS-T cell lines, reaching up to 85% of cells expressing the transgene in a single round of infection. MLV-based vectors, on the other hand, were unable to transduce more than 1% of any of the HVS-T cell lines analyzed. Lentiviral-driven gene expression was maintained constant and stable in HVS-T cells for a minimum of 48 days. We also observed that although the lentiviral transduction efficiency achieved on HVS-T cells is lower than that obtained with tumor or primary endothelial cells, it is nevertheless similar to that found with activated primary T cells.
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