Liver Sinusoidal Endothelial Cells as Possible Vehicles for Gene Therapy: A Comparison Between Plasmid-Based and Lentiviral Gene Transfer Techniques

Author: Paez-Cortez Jesus  

Publisher: Informa Healthcare

ISSN: 1062-3329

Source: Endothelium, Vol.15, Iss.4, 2008-07, pp. : 165-173

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Abstract

Liver sinusoidal endothelial cells (LSECs) constitute an attractive target for gene therapy of several liver and systemic diseases. However, there are few reports showing an efficient plasmid-based or viral methodology to deliver recombinant genes into these cells. In the present study, the authors evaluated in vitro gene transfer efficiency of standard plasmid-based techniques (i.e., electroporation, lipofection, and calcium phosphate) and lentiviral-mediated gene transduction into primary murine LSECs, using reporter genes. The results show that electroporation is the most effective in vitro plasmid-gene transfer method to deliver GFP into LSECs (31%), as compared with lipofection and calcium phosphate transfection (6% and 4%, respectively). However, lentiviral transduction resulted in higher, efficient, and stable gene transfer (70%) as compared with plasmid-based techniques. Conclusions: The highly efficient gene expression obtained by lentiviral transduction and electroporation shows that these methodologies are highly reliable systems for gene transfer into LSECs.