Prospects for insulin delivery by ex-vivo somatic cell gene therapy
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Molecular Medicine
- Vol. 77 (1) , 244-249
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s001090050345
Abstract
The principle of insulin delivery by ex-vivo somatic cell gene therapy involves the removal of non-B-cell somatic cells (e.g. fibroblasts) from a diabetic patient, and genetically altering them in vitro to produce and secrete insulin. The cells can be grown in culture and returned to the donor as a source of insulin replacement. Cells modified in this way could be evaluated before implantation, and reserve stocks could be cryopreserved. By using the patient’s own cells, the procedure should obviate the need for immunosuppression and overcome the problem of tissue supply, while avoiding a recurrence of cell destruction. Ex-vivo somatic cell gene therapy requires an accessible and robust cell type that is amenable to multiple transfections and subject to controlled proliferation. Special problems associated with the use of non-B-cell somatic cells include the processing of proinsulin to insulin, and the conferment of sensitivity to glucose-stimulated proinsulin biosynthesis and regulated insulin release. Preliminary studies using fibroblasts, pituitary cells, kidney (COS) cells and ovarian (CHO) cells suggest that these challenges could be met, and that ex-vivo somatic cell gene therapy offers a feasible approach to insulin replacement therapy.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Gene therapy for diabetes mellitus in rats by hepatic expression of insulin.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1995
- Lymphocytic Infundibuloneurohypophysitis as a Cause of Central Diabetes InsipidusNew England Journal of Medicine, 1993
- Deletion of a highly conserved tetrapeptide sequence of the proinsulin connecting peptide (C-peptide) inhibits proinsulin to insulin conversion by transfected pituitary corticotroph (AtT20) cellsJournal of Biological Chemistry, 1989
- Abnormal response to DNA crosslinking agents of Fanconi anemia fibroblasts can be corrected by transfection with normal human DNA.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1986
- Expression of the human insulin gene and cDNA in a heterologous mammalian system.Journal of Biological Chemistry, 1983
- Use of recombinant DNA technology to program eukaryotic cells to synthesize rat proinsulin: a rapid expression assay for cloned genes.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1982