Survival rates of dopamine (DA) neurons grafted to the denervated striatum are extremely poor (5-20%). Gene transfer of survival promoting factors, such as the anti-apoptotic protein bcl-2, to mesencephalic DA neurons prior to transplantation (ex vivo transduction) offers a novel approach to increase graft survival. However, specific criteria to assess the efficacy of various vectors must be adhered to in order to reasonably predict successful gene transfer with appropriate timing and levels of protein expression. Cell culture results utilizing three different herpes simplex virus (HSV) vectors to deliver the reporter beta-galactosidase gene (lacZ) indicate that transduction of mesencephalic cells with a helper virus-free HSV amplicon (HF HSV-TH9lac) that harbors the 9-kb tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) promoter to drive lacZ gene expression elicits the transduction of the highest percentage (approximately 50%) of TH-immunoreactive (THir) neurons without significant cytotoxic effects. This transduction efficiency and limited cytotoxicity was superior to that observed following transduction with helper virus-containing HSV (HC HSVlac) and helper virus-free HSV amplicons (HF HSVlac) expressing lacZ under the transcriptional control of the HSV immediate-early 4/5 gene promoter. Subsequently, we assessed the ability of HSV-TH9lac and the bcl-2 expressing HSV-TH9bcl-2 amplicon to transduce mesencephalic reaggregates. Although an increase in bcl-2 and beta-galactosidase protein was induced by transduction, amplicon-mediated overexpression of bcl-2 did not lead to an increase in grafted THir neuron number. Even with highly efficient viral vector-mediated transduction, our results demonstrate that ex vivo gene transfer of bcl-2 to mesencephalic reaggregates is ineffective in increasing grafted DA neuron survival.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2006.11.079 | DOI Listing |
Brain Res
February 2007
Department of Neurology University of Cincinnati, PO Box 670537, ML0537, Cincinnati, OH 45267-0537, USA.
Survival rates of dopamine (DA) neurons grafted to the denervated striatum are extremely poor (5-20%). Gene transfer of survival promoting factors, such as the anti-apoptotic protein bcl-2, to mesencephalic DA neurons prior to transplantation (ex vivo transduction) offers a novel approach to increase graft survival. However, specific criteria to assess the efficacy of various vectors must be adhered to in order to reasonably predict successful gene transfer with appropriate timing and levels of protein expression.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCell Transplant
December 2004
Department of Neurological Sciences, Research Center for Brain Repair, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL 60612, USA.
One experimental therapy for Parkinson's disease (PD) is the transplantation of embryonic ventral mesencephalic tissue. Unfortunately, up to 95% of grafted neurons die, many via apoptosis. Activated caspases play a key role in execution of the apoptotic pathway; therefore, exposure to caspase inhibitors may provide an effective intervention strategy for protection against apoptotic cell death.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExp Neurol
May 2004
Department of Neurological Sciences, Research Center for Brain Repair, Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, IL 60612, USA.
Grafts of primary ventral mesencephalic tissue and cell suspensions to the denervated striatum are currently utilized as a treatment strategy for Parkinson's disease. Survival rates of grafted dopamine (DA) neurons are extremely poor (5-20%) and is even poorer in grafts to the aged striatum. Short pretreatment of grafted cells with various survival-promoting agents has elicited 2- to 3-fold improvements in these survival rates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFolia Neuropathol
October 2002
Department of Morphology, Institute of Experimental Medicine, St Petersburg, Russia.
Suspensional reaggregates were obtained from human neocortical and tegmental anlagen (7 weeks of gestation), using 0.1% tripsin solution, and cultivated in Medium 199. Suspensional reaggregates, formed after 2 days in vitro, were grafted into the Wistar rat striatum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBrain Res Dev Brain Res
July 2002
Department of Neurobiology, Pharmacology and Physiology, The University of Chicago, 947 East 58th Street, Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA, Ecstasy) is a potent psychomotor stimulant with neurotoxic potential which is widely abused by females of childbearing age raising serious public health concerns in terms of exposure of the fetus to the drug. The current study was conducted using the three-dimensional reaggregate tissue culture system as an approach to the assessment of risk to fetal brain cells following exposure to MDMA during early to mid-gestation. In this culture system, the serotonergic and dopaminergic mesencephalic-striatal projections are reconstructed and develop with a time course similar to that observed in vivo.
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