A primary advantage of lentiviral vectors is their ability to pass through the nuclear envelope into the cell nucleus thereby allowing transduction of nondividing cells. Using HIV-based lentiviral vectors, we delivered an anti-CCR5 ribozyme (CCR5RZ), a nucleolar localizing TAR RNA decoy, or Pol III-expressed siRNA genes into cultured and primary cells. The CCR5RZ is driven by the adenoviral VA1 Pol III promoter, while the human U6 snRNA Pol III-transcribed TAR decoy is embedded in a U16 snoRNA (designated U16TAR), and the siRNAs were expressed from the human U6 Pol III promoter. The transduction efficiencies of these vectors ranged from 96-98% in 293 cells to 15-20% in primary PBMCs. A combination of the CCR5RZ and U16TAR decoy in a single vector backbone gave enhanced protection against HIV-1 challenge in a selective survival assay in both primary T cells and CD34(+)-derived monocytes. The lentiviral vector backbone-expressed siRNAs also showed potent inhibition of p24 expression in PBMCs challenged with HIV-1. Overall our results demonstrate that the lentiviral-based vectors can efficiently deliver single constructs as well as combinations of Pol III therapeutic expression units into primary hematopoietic cells for anti-HIV gene therapy and hold promise for stem or T-cell-based gene therapy for HIV-1 infection.

Li, M., Bauer, G., Michienzi, A., Yee, J., Lee, N., Kim, J., et al. (2003). Inhibition of HIV-1 infection by lentiviral vectors expressing Pol III-promoted anti-HIV RNAs. MOLECULAR THERAPY, 8(2), 196-206.

Inhibition of HIV-1 infection by lentiviral vectors expressing Pol III-promoted anti-HIV RNAs

MICHIENZI, ALESSANDRO;
2003-08-01

Abstract

A primary advantage of lentiviral vectors is their ability to pass through the nuclear envelope into the cell nucleus thereby allowing transduction of nondividing cells. Using HIV-based lentiviral vectors, we delivered an anti-CCR5 ribozyme (CCR5RZ), a nucleolar localizing TAR RNA decoy, or Pol III-expressed siRNA genes into cultured and primary cells. The CCR5RZ is driven by the adenoviral VA1 Pol III promoter, while the human U6 snRNA Pol III-transcribed TAR decoy is embedded in a U16 snoRNA (designated U16TAR), and the siRNAs were expressed from the human U6 Pol III promoter. The transduction efficiencies of these vectors ranged from 96-98% in 293 cells to 15-20% in primary PBMCs. A combination of the CCR5RZ and U16TAR decoy in a single vector backbone gave enhanced protection against HIV-1 challenge in a selective survival assay in both primary T cells and CD34(+)-derived monocytes. The lentiviral vector backbone-expressed siRNAs also showed potent inhibition of p24 expression in PBMCs challenged with HIV-1. Overall our results demonstrate that the lentiviral-based vectors can efficiently deliver single constructs as well as combinations of Pol III therapeutic expression units into primary hematopoietic cells for anti-HIV gene therapy and hold promise for stem or T-cell-based gene therapy for HIV-1 infection.
ago-2003
Pubblicato
Rilevanza internazionale
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Settore BIO/12 - BIOCHIMICA CLINICA E BIOLOGIA MOLECOLARE CLINICA
English
Con Impact Factor ISI
Cell Line; Cells, Cultured; Lentivirus; DNA Polymerase III; HIV Infections; Gene Therapy; RNA, Catalytic; Base Sequence; T-Lymphocytes; Humans; Gene Expression; Cell Survival; HIV Long Terminal Repeat; Genetic Vectors; Promoter Regions, Genetic; Receptors, CCR5; RNA, Small Interfering
Li, M., Bauer, G., Michienzi, A., Yee, J., Lee, N., Kim, J., et al. (2003). Inhibition of HIV-1 infection by lentiviral vectors expressing Pol III-promoted anti-HIV RNAs. MOLECULAR THERAPY, 8(2), 196-206.
Li, M; Bauer, G; Michienzi, A; Yee, J; Lee, N; Kim, J; Li, S; Castanotto, D; Zaia, J; Rossi, J
Articolo su rivista
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2108/10547
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 145
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 128
social impact