Publications by authors named "AD Miller"

Hemophilia B is an X-chromosome-linked bleeding disorder resulting from lack of clotting factor IX activity and affects about 1 in 30,000 males. Current therapy involves injection of crude factor IX prepared from pooled human plasma. Treatment is complicated by viral contaminants in factor IX preparations, such as non A-non B hepatitis and the AIDS virus, and by the practical difficulties of chronic injections.

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Cell lines were established which produced high titers (approximately 10(6) infectious units per ml) of amphotropic, replication-defective recombinant retroviruses which transduced sequences encoding either human purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) or adenosine deaminase (ADA). These viruses also contained a human hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase gene as a selectable marker and a mouse metallothionein promoter (MMP) sequence just upstream from the PNP or ADA genes. Virus structure was maintained through the replication cycle if a short (216-base pair) MMP sequence was used.

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The translational stop codon TAA of the human hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) cDNA has been changed to GAA by site-specific mutagenesis. This modification extends the open reading frame to a downstream stop codon and results in the addition of a unique negatively charged hexapeptide to the C terminus of human HPRT protein. The mutated cDNA was transferred into HPRT-deficient rodent cells by retroviral vector infection, and the expressed enzyme was found to be fully active.

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The extent of the region of the diaphragm around the esophagus that displays greatly reduced activity during the expulsive phase of vomiting was determined from electromyographic studies in cats to be about 0.75-1.0 cm from the esophagus.

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Retrovirus vectors can be made in the absence of helper virus by using retrovirus packaging cell lines. Helper-free virus is critical for a variety of gene transfer studies. The most useful packaging cell lines contain helper virus DNA from which the signal required for packaging of the viral RNA genome into virions has been deleted.

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Amphotropic retroviral vectors containing either a mutant dihydrofolate reductase gene (DHFR) or the bacterial neomycin phosphotransferase gene (neo) were used to infect canine hemopoietic cells. We report successful transfer and expression of the DHFR and neo genes in canine hemopoietic progenitor cells (colony-forming units, granulocyte/macrophage) as measured by the ability of the viruses to confer resistance to either methotrexate or the aminoglycoside G418, respectively. Transfer was achieved in the absence of helper virus by using retrovirus packaging cell lines.

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Patients with certain genetic disorders can be cured by bone marrow transplantation. However, as prospective donors do not exist for most patients with potentially curable genetic abnormalities, an alternative treatment for such patients involves the transfer of cloned genes into the patient's haematopoietic stem cells followed by re-infusion of the treated cells. Retroviral vectors provide an efficient means for transferring genes into mammalian cells and have been used to transfer genes into mouse haematopoietic cells.

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Retrovirus vectors allow efficient transfer of genetic material into cells. We describe an improved method for making cell lines which secrete broad host range retrovirus vectors in the absence of helper virus. This method was used to make virus-producing cell lines from several retrovirus vector constructions that encode dominant selectable markers.

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We present a general strategy for the efficient insertion of recombinant retroviral vector DNA into the mouse germ line via infection of preimplantation mouse embryos. Transgenic mice were generated that harbor a replication-competent recombinant retrovirus (delta Mo + Py M-MuLV) that lacks the Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV)-type enhancer sequence in the long terminal repeat (LTR). Instead, the LTR contains an enhancer element that permits polyoma virus F101 to grow in undifferentiated F9 embryonal carcinoma cells.

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Both FBJ murine osteosarcoma virus (FBJ-MSV) and FBR-MSV induce transformation in tissue culture and osteogenic sarcomas in mice. In tissue culture, however, FBR-MSV induces larger foci with a shorter latency than those induced by FBJ-MSV. Transformation is dependent on expression of the fos oncogene in FBJ-MSV and of a gag-fos fusion protein in FBR-MSV.

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Transformation of fibroblasts by protooncogene fos (c-fos) requires the linkage of viral long terminal repeat (LTR) sequences and interruption of 3'-noncoding sequences. We have identified an A + T-rich stretch of 67 nucleotides, located 627-693 base pairs downstream from the coding domain and 123-189 base pairs upstream from the putative poly(A) addition site, removal of which confers transforming activity to the c-fos gene. A novel regulation of the expression of the c-fos gene is proposed, which may be functional in vivo to prevent the gene from becoming an oncogene.

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Control of abdominal musculature by brain stem respiratory neurons was studied in decerebrate unanesthetized cats by determining 1) which brain stem respiratory neurons could be antidromically activated from the lumbar cord, from which the abdominal muscles receive part of their innervation, and 2) if lumbar-projecting respiratory neurons make monosynaptic connections with abdominal motoneurons. A total of 462 respiratory neurons, located between caudal C2 and the retrofacial nucleus (Bötzinger complex), were tested for antidromic activation from the upper lumbar cord. Fifty-eight percent of expiratory (E) neurons (70/121) in the caudal ventral respiratory group (VRG) between the obex and rostral C1 were antidromically activated from contralateral L1.

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The responses of central vestibular neurons in the decerebrate cat subjected to whole-body tilt were examined as a function both of stimulus orientation (with respect to the cat's head) and frequency, with the aim of understanding the neural processing responsible for producing the observed response patterns. Responses to whole-body tilt were recorded from vestibular neurons in and around the lateral vestibular nucleus (LVN). By plugging all six semicircular canals, the otolith contribution was studied in isolation.

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We constructed several retroviruses which transduced a mutant dihydrofolate reductase gene that was resistant to methotrexate inhibition and functioned as a dominant selectable marker. The titer of dihydrofolate reductase-transducing virus produced by virus-producing cells could be increased to very high levels by selection of the cells in increasing concentrations of methotrexate. Helper virus-free dihydrofolate reductase-transducing virus was also generated by using a broad-host-range amphotropic retroviral packaging system.

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A growth hormone minigene carrying its natural promoter (237 nucleotides of chromosomal DNA) was stably propagated in a murine retrovirus containing hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase as a selectable marker. Glucocorticoid and thyroid hormone inducibility was transferred with the growth hormone gene. Recombinant virus with titers of 10(6) per milliliter was recovered.

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Transmissible retroviruses encoding human hypoxanthine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT) were used to infect mouse bone marrow cells in vitro, and the infected cells were transplanted into mice. Both active human HPRT-protein and chronic HPRT-virus production were detected in hematopoietic tissue of the mice, showing transfer of the gene. These results indicate the possible use of retroviruses for somatic cell therapy.

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A human Lesch-Nyhan (hereditary, severe hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPR transferase) deficiency) B-lymphoblast line was infected with an amphotropic retroviral vector containing human HPR transferase cDNA under transcriptional control of viral long terminal repeat sequences. Of 17 clones isolated, 12 integration groups were defined by analysis of restriction enzyme digests of their genomic DNA with HPR transferase and viral long terminal repeat probes. These groups had HPR transferase activity restored to levels of 4 to 23% of normal values.

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The FBJ murine osteosarcoma virus (FBJ-MuSV) induces osteosarcomas in mice and transforms fibroblasts in vitro. It contains an oncogene termed v-fos derived from a normal cellular gene by recombination with an associated helper virus. The product of the v-fos gene is a 55,000 dalton protein, p55v-fos.

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