Muscle creatine kinase/SV40 hybrid promoter for muscle-targeted long-term transgene expression (original) (raw)
2007, International journal of molecular medicine
Gene therapy for congenital protein deficiencies requires lifelong expression of a deficient protein. Current gene therapy approaches preferentially employ the strong cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter/enhancer or its derivative CAG promoter; however, these promoters provide only temporary transgene expression. To create a promoter that enables long-lasting expression in muscle, hybrid promoters were constructed by coupling the muscle creatine kinase (MCK) enhancer to various strong promoters for enhancement of tissue specificity and improved transcriptional activity. A hybrid promoter containing the MCK enhancer and the simian virus 40 promoter (MCK/SV40 promoter) yielded long-term (>6 months) expression of a human secretory alkaline phosphatase (huSEAP) reporter gene following electrotransfer of the plasmid into mice, whereas expression using a conventional CMV or CAG promoter faded away within a few weeks. To explore the mechanism behind the sustained expression obtained with the ...
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