| Literature DB >> 28912718 |
Mei Huang1, Rui Sun2, Qiang Huang1, Zhigang Tian2.
Abstract
Development of an safe and efficient in vivo gene delivery method is indispensable for molecular biology research and the progress in the following gene therapy. Over the past few years, hydrodynamic gene delivery (HGD) with naked DNA has drawn increasing interest in both research and potential clinic applications due to its high efficiency and low risk in triggering immune responses and carcinogenesis in comparison to viral vectors. This method, involving intravenous injection (i.v.) of massive DNA in a short duration, gives a transient but high in vivo gene expression especially in the liver of small animals. In addition to DNA, it has also been shown to deliver other substance such as RNA, proteins, synthetic small compounds and even viruses in vivo. Given its ability to robustly mimic in vivo hepatitis B virus (HBV) production in liver, HGD has become a fundamental and important technology on HBV studies in our group and many other groups. Recently, there have been interesting reports about the applications and further improvement of this technology in other liver research. Here, we review the principle, safety, current application and development of hydrodynamic delivery in liver disease studies, and discuss its future prospects, clinical potential and challenges.Entities:
Keywords: HBV; gene delivery; gene therapy; hydrodynamic injection; liver diseases
Year: 2017 PMID: 28912718 PMCID: PMC5582077 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2017.00591
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Applications of HGD in liver study.
| Gene over-expression | Wang et al., |
| Gene knockdown | Song et al., |
| Simultaneous over-expression and knockdown | Geng et al., |
| HBV | Yang et al., |
| HCV | McCaffrey et al., |
| HDV | Chang et al., |
| HCC | Tward et al., |
| HSV-1 | Cui et al., |
| HBV | Deng et al., |
| HIV | Raska et al., |
| LCMV | Obeng-Adjei et al., |
| Hepatitis | Anavi et al., |
| Liver fibrosis | Chen S. W. et al., |
| Liver-draining lymph nodes | Zheng et al., |
Substances entry into parenchymal cells by HGD methods.
| pDNA | Yang et al., |
| 125I-DNA | Zhang et al., |
| Transposon | Yant et al., |
| Antisense or decoy oligonucleotides | Tomita et al., |
| Chimeric DNA-RNA oligonucleotide duplex | Lai and Lien, |
| Peptide nucleic acid | Ray and Norden, |
| siRNA | Song et al., |
| shRNA | Huang et al., |
| Evans Blue | Zhang et al., |
| Galactosidase | Zhang et al., |
| Adenovirus | Chen Q. et al., |
| Adeno-associated virus | O'Callaghan et al., |
| Retrovirus | Wu et al., |
| Lentivirus | Condiotti et al., |
| Epstein-Barr virus | Stoll et al., |
| pDNA-cationic liposome complexes | Templeton, |
| pDNA-cationic polymer complexes | Thomas and Klibanov, |
| Fluorescence-labeled beads | Kobayashi et al., |