Literature DB >> 10694823

Retrovirally expressed anti-HIV ribozymes confer a selective survival advantage on CD4+ T cells in vitro.

C Klebba1, O G Ottmann, M Scherr, M Pape, J W Engels, M Grez, D Hoelzer, S A Klein.   

Abstract

To date, a selective advantage of cells expressing anti-HIV ribozymes has not been shown. This study was undertaken to determine whether such a selective advantage can be demonstrated in vitro. A retroviral vector coding for a hairpin ribozyme targeting the HIV 5'LTR and for the low affinity nerve growth factor receptor (LNGF-RDelta) was designed. Since we demonstrated by RT-PCR that the amount of ribozyme transcripts was highly correlated with the level of surface LNGF-RDelta expression, the vector was utilized to assess ribozyme expression by flow cytometry. Transduced Hut78 and primary CD4+ T cells were purified and subsequently mixed with unmodified cells. After HIV challenge the percentage of ribozyme expressing cells in the cell mixture was monitored by flow cytometry. Twenty-one days after HIV infection the proportion of ribozyme expressing CD4+ T cells was 2.6 times higher in comparison to cells with the control vector. CD4+ T cells with a strong ribozyme expression conferred a 7.4-fold selective advantage at day 21 and a 11.7-fold at day 28. For Hut78 cells a selective advantage was detected exclusively for strongly ribozyme expressing cells. As a mechanism underlying the selective advantage an inhibition of HIV induced apoptosis was shown. These results demonstrate that anti-HIV ribozymes are able to confer a selective survival advantage and indicate that the protective effect is dependent on the amount of ribozyme expression. Gene Therapy (2000) 7, 408-416.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10694823     DOI: 10.1038/sj.gt.3301094

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gene Ther        ISSN: 0969-7128            Impact factor:   5.250


  6 in total

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2.  HIV-1 LTR as a target for synthetic ribozyme-mediated inhibition of gene expression: site selection and inhibition in cell culture.

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Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2000-11-01       Impact factor: 16.971

3.  Anti-HBV hairpin ribozyme-mediated cleavage of target RNA in vitro.

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4.  Cross-clade inhibition of HIV-1 replication and cytopathology by using RNase P-associated external guide sequences.

Authors:  Gunter Kraus; Rebeca Geffin; Gina Spruill; Andrea K Young; Rachel Seivright; Diana Cardona; Jennifer Burzawa; H James Hnatyszyn
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5.  In vivo selection of CD4(+) T cells transduced with a gamma-retroviral vector expressing a single-chain intrabody targeting HIV-1 tat.

Authors:  Stephen E Braun; Ran Taube; Quan Zhu; Fay Eng Wong; Akikazu Murakami; Erick Kamau; Markryan Dwyer; Gang Qiu; Janet Daigle; Angela Carville; R Paul Johnson; Wayne A Marasco
Journal:  Hum Gene Ther       Date:  2012-09       Impact factor: 5.695

6.  Membrane-anchored peptide inhibits human immunodeficiency virus entry.

Authors:  M Hildinger; M T Dittmar; P Schult-Dietrich; B Fehse; B S Schnierle; S Thaler; G Stiegler; R Welker; D von Laer
Journal:  J Virol       Date:  2001-03       Impact factor: 5.103

  6 in total

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