A novel means of drug delivery: myoblast-mediated gene therapy and regulatable retroviral vectors

CR Ozawa, ML Springer, HM Blau - Annual Review of …, 2000 - annualreviews.org
CR Ozawa, ML Springer, HM Blau
Annual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology, 2000annualreviews.org
A potentially powerful approach to drug delivery in the treatment of disease involves the use
of cells to introduce genes encoding therapeutic proteins into the body. Candidate genes for
delivery include those encoding secreted factors that could have broad applications ranging
from treatment of inherited single-gene deficiencies to acquired disorders of the vasculature
or cancer. Myoblasts, the proliferative cell type of skeletal muscle tissues, are potent tools for
stable delivery of a gene of interest into the body, as they become an integral part of the …
A potentially powerful approach to drug delivery in the treatment of disease involves the use of cells to introduce genes encoding therapeutic proteins into the body. Candidate genes for delivery include those encoding secreted factors that could have broad applications ranging from treatment of inherited single-gene deficiencies to acquired disorders of the vasculature or cancer. Myoblasts, the proliferative cell type of skeletal muscle tissues, are potent tools for stable delivery of a gene of interest into the body, as they become an integral part of the muscle into which they are injected, in close proximity to the circulation. The recent development of improved tetracycline-inducible retroviral vectors allows for fine control of recombinant gene expression levels. The combination of ex vivo gene transfer using myoblasts and regulatable retroviral vectors provides a powerful toolbox with which to develop gene therapies for a number of human diseases.
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