Sustainable Systemic Delivery via a Single Injection of Lentivirus into Human Skin Tissue
- 10 August 2001
- journal article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in Human Gene Therapy
- Vol. 12 (12) , 1551-1558
- https://doi.org/10.1089/10430340152480276
Abstract
The skin offers a tissue site accessible for delivery of gene-based therapeutics. To develop the capability for sustained systemic polypeptide delivery via cutaneous gene transfer, we generated and injected pseudotyped HIV-1 lentiviral vectors intradermally at a range of doses into human skin grafted on immune-deficient mice. Unlike Moloney murine leukemia virus (MLV)-based retrovectors, which failed to achieve detectable cutaneous gene transfer by this approach, lentivectors effectively targeted all major cell types within human skin tissue, including fibroblasts, endothelial cells, keratinocytes, and macrophages. After a single injection, lentivectors encoding human erythropoietin (EPO) produced dose-dependent increases in serum human EPO levels and hematocrit that increased rapidly within one month and remained stable subsequently. Delivered gene expression was confined locally at the injection site. Excision of engineered skin led to rapid and complete loss of human EPO in the bloodstream, confirming that systemic EPO delivery was entirely due to lentiviral targeting of cells within skin rather than via spread of the injected vector to visceral tissues. These findings indicate that the skin can sustain dosed systemic delivery of therapeutic polypeptides via direct lentivector injection and thus provide an accessible and reversible approach for gene-based delivery to the bloodstream.Keywords
This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
- Regulated Cutaneous Gene Delivery: The Skin as a BioreactorHuman Gene Therapy, 2000
- Virus-Mediated Gene Transfer for Cutaneous Gene TherapyHuman Gene Therapy, 2000
- Genetic Correction of Inherited Epidermal DisordersHuman Gene Therapy, 2000
- The Genodermatoses: Candidate Diseases for Gene TherapyHuman Gene Therapy, 2000
- Fas Signal Transduction Triggers Either Proliferation or Apoptosis in Human FibroblastsJournal of Investigative Dermatology, 1997
- Transglutaminase 1 Delivery to Lamellar Ichthyosis KeratinocytesHuman Gene Therapy, 1996
- In Vivo Gene Delivery and Stable Transduction of Nondividing Cells by a Lentiviral VectorScience, 1996
- Cytokine gene expression in epidermis with biological effects following injection of naked DNANature Genetics, 1995
- Sustained Production of Human Transferrin by Transduced Fibroblasts Implanted into Athymic Mice: A Model for Somatic Gene TherapyJournal of Investigative Dermatology, 1995
- Na+‐dependent high affinity uptake of l‐glutamate in primary cultures of human fibroblasts isolated from three different types of tissueFEBS Letters, 1994