Technical requirements for effective regional hydrodynamic gene delivery to the left lateral lobe of the rat liver (original) (raw)
- Original Article
- Published: 14 January 2010
Gene Therapy volume 17, pages 560–564 (2010)Cite this article
- 440 Accesses
- 3 Altmetric
- Metrics details
Subjects
Abstract
Hydrodynamic gene delivery to the liver is an attractive approach for clinical liver gene therapy, but critical aspects of technique remain uncertain. There has not been to date any report of high levels of hydrodynamic gene delivery to the liver, except in rodents. Regional hydrodynamic delivery to individual lobes/segments of the liver is being pursued in preclinical pig models, where reporter gene expression has been <1% of rodent levels, and in one clinical study, where there was no substantive evidence of gene expression. In none of these studies did surgical technique include outflow obstruction of the DNA solution. Here we report a novel technique for regional hydrodynamic gene delivery to the left lateral lobe of the rat liver. The technique gives high levels of gene delivery specific to the left lateral lobe with low volumes (∼1.5 ml) of DNA solution, and permits an evaluation of hydrodynamic delivery in the presence and in the absence of outflow obstruction. We report that outflow obstruction is an absolute requirement for effective hydrodynamic gene delivery to individual lobes/segments of the liver, and therefore that minimally invasive techniques will not be possible in the clinic.
This is a preview of subscription content, access via your institution
Access options
Subscribe to this journal
Receive 12 print issues and online access
$259.00 per year
only $21.58 per issue
Buy this article
- Purchase on SpringerLink
- Instant access to full article PDF
Prices may be subject to local taxes which are calculated during checkout
Additional access options:
Similar content being viewed by others
References
- Zhang G, Budker V, Wolff JA . High levels of foreign gene expression in hepatocytes after tail vein injections of naked plasmid DNA. Hum Gene Ther 1999; 10: 1735–1737.
Article CAS Google Scholar - Liu F, Song Y, Liu D . Hydrodynamics-based transfection in animals by systemic administration of plasmid DNA. Gene Therapy 1999; 6: 1258–1266.
Article CAS Google Scholar - Maruyama H, Higuchi N, Nishikawa Y, Kameda S, Iino N, Kazama JJ et al. High-level expression of naked DNA delivered to rat liver via tail vein injection. J Gene Med 2002; 4: 333–341.
Article CAS Google Scholar - Sawyer GJ, Dong X, Whitehorne M, Grehan A, Seddon M, Shah AM et al. Cardiovascular function following acute volume overload for hydrodynamic gene delivery to the liver. Gene Therapy 2007; 14: 1208–1217.
Article CAS Google Scholar - Herrero MJ, Dasi F, Noguera I, Sanchez M, Moret I, Sanmartin I et al. Mouse and pig non-viral liver gene therapy: success and trials. Gene Ther Mol Biol 2005; 9: 169–180.
Google Scholar - Yoshino H, Hashizume K, Kobayashi E . Naked plasmid DNA transfer to the porcine liver using rapid injection with large volume. Gene Therapy 2006; 13: 1696–1702.
Article CAS Google Scholar - Aliño SF, Herrero MJ, Noguera I, Dasí F, Sánchez M . Pig liver gene therapy by noninvasive interventionist catheterism. Gene Therapy 2007; 14: 334–343.
Article Google Scholar - Suda T, Suda K, Liu D . Computer-assisted hydrodynamic gene delivery. Mol Ther 2008; 16: 1098–1104.
Article CAS Google Scholar - Fabre JW, Grehan A, Whitehorne M, Sawyer GJ, Dong X, Salehi S et al. Hydrodynamic gene delivery to the pig liver via an isolated segment of the inferior vena cava. Gene Therapy 2008; 15: 452–462.
Article CAS Google Scholar - Kamimura K, Suda T, Xu W, Zhang G, Liu D . Image-guided, lobe-specific hydrodynamic gene delivery to swine liver. Mol Ther 2009; 17: 491–499.
Article CAS Google Scholar - Khorsandi SE, Bachellier P, Weber JC, Greget M, Jaeck D, Zacharoulis D et al. Minimally invasive and selective hydrodynamic gene therapy of liver segments in the pig and human. Cancer Gene Ther 2008; 15: 225–230.
Article CAS Google Scholar - Zhang G, Gao X, Song YK, Vollmer R, Stolz DB, Gasiorowski JZ et al. Hydroporation as the mechanism of hydrodynamic delivery. Gene Therapy 2004; 11: 675–682.
Article CAS Google Scholar - Sawyer GJ, Rela M, Davenport M, Whitehorne M, Zhang X, Fabre JW . Hydrodynamic gene delivery to the liver: theoretical and practical issues for clinical application. Curr Gene Ther 2009; 9: 128–135.
Article CAS Google Scholar - Zhang X, Dong X, Sawyer GJ, Collins L, Fabre JW . Regional hydrodynamic gene delivery to the rat liver with physiological volumes of DNA solution. J Gene Med 2004; 6: 693–703.
Article CAS Google Scholar - Sawyer GJ, Grehan A, Dong X, Whitehorne M, Seddon M, Shah AM et al. Low volume hydrodynamic gene delivery to the rat liver via an isolated segment of the inferior vena cava: efficiency, cardiovascular response and intrahepatic vascular dynamics. J Gene Med 2008; 10: 540–550.
Article CAS Google Scholar - Wisse E, Jacobs F, Topal B, Frederik P, De Geest B . The size of endothelial fenestrae in human liver sinusoids: implications for hepatocyte-directed gene transfer. Gene Therapy 2008; 15: 1193–1199.
Article CAS Google Scholar - Miyatsuka T, Kaneto H, Kajimoto Y, Hirota S, Arakawa Y, Fujitani Y et al. Ectopically expressed PDX-1 in liver initiates endocrine and exocrine pancreas differentiation but causes dysmorphogenesis. Biochem Biophys Res Comm 2003; 310: 1017–1025.
Article CAS Google Scholar
Acknowledgements
We acknowledge the support from the Rosetrees Trust.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
- Department of Hepatology and Transplantation, King's College London School of Medicine, James Black Centre, London, UK
G J Sawyer, X Zhang & J W Fabre
Authors
- G J Sawyer
You can also search for this author inPubMed Google Scholar - X Zhang
You can also search for this author inPubMed Google Scholar - J W Fabre
You can also search for this author inPubMed Google Scholar
Corresponding author
Correspondence toJ W Fabre.
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Additional information
Supplementary Information accompanies the paper on Gene Therapy website
Supplementary information
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Sawyer, G., Zhang, X. & Fabre, J. Technical requirements for effective regional hydrodynamic gene delivery to the left lateral lobe of the rat liver.Gene Ther 17, 560–564 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1038/gt.2009.167
- Received: 14 October 2009
- Revised: 19 November 2009
- Accepted: 22 November 2009
- Published: 14 January 2010
- Issue Date: April 2010
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/gt.2009.167