| Literature DB >> 34084147 |
Nicole Reyne1,2,3, Patricia Cmielewski1,2,3, Alexandra McCarron1,2,3, Juliette Delhove1,2,3, David Parsons1,2,3, Martin Donnelley1,2,3.
Abstract
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is a genetic disease caused by mutations in the CF transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene, resulting in defective ion transport in the airways. Addition of a functioning CFTR gene into affected airway cells has the potential to be an effective treatment for lung disease. The therapeutic efficacy of airway gene transfer can be quantified in animal models by assessing ion transport in the treated nasal epithelium using the nasal potential difference (PD) measurement technique. The nasal PD technique is routinely used in CF mice, however when applied to a recently developed CF rat model those animals did not tolerate the initial nasal PD assessment, therefore the procedure was firstly optimised in rats. This study evaluated the effect of lentiviral (LV)-mediated CFTR airway gene delivery on nasal PD in a CFTR knockout rat model. LV gene vector containing the CFTR gene tagged with a V5 epitope tag (LV-V5-CFTR) was delivered to the nasal epithelium of CF rats, and one week later nasal PD was analysed. This study demonstrated for the first time that LV-V5-CFTR treatment produced a mean correction of 46% towards wild-type chloride response in treated CF rats. Transduced cells were subsequently identifiable using V5 immunohistochemical staining. These findings in the nose validate the use of airway gene therapy for future lung based experiments.Entities:
Keywords: Rat; cystic fibrosis; gene therapy; lentival vector; nasal potential difference (NPD)
Year: 2021 PMID: 34084147 PMCID: PMC8167067 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2021.682299
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1Nasal PD measurements from WT and CF KO rats. Nasal PD measurements in WT and CF KO rats for (A) basal KRB (B) the ΔPDNa (C) ΔPDCl and (D) ΔPDIso (n = 6–10 animals/group; **p ≤ 0.01, ***p ≤ 0.001, unpaired t-test). Data represented as the mean −/+ SEM.
FIGURE 2Representative nasal PD tracing of WT, CF KO and treated CF KO rat. When compared to WT, CF KO rats demonstrate classic CF electrophysiological defects in nasal respiratory epithelium. Treated CF KO rats demonstrate a PD trace showing the corrected bioelectrical defect.
FIGURE 3Pre-treatment and post-treatment nasal PD results following LV-V5-CFTR vector delivery to nasal epithelium of CF KO rats. Nasal PD measurements in CF KO rats for (A) basal KRB (B) ΔPDNa (C) ΔPDCl, and (D) ΔPDIso. Dot/dash line indicates the WT average (*p ≤ 0.05, **p ≤ 0.01, paired t-test; n = 14–16). Data represented as the mean with −/+ SEM.
FIGURE 4Immunohistochemical detection of V5-CFTR in the rat nasal epithelium. (A,B) V5 IHC enables localisation of CFTR (red) in the right nostril (treated) one week after delivery of LV-V5-CFTR. (C) No staining was observed on the left (untreated) side of the rat nose. Scale bar 20 μm.