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Title: Adenoviral transfection of isolated pancreatic islets: a study of programmed cell death (apoptosis) and islet function. Author: Weber M, Deng S, Kucher T, Shaked A, Ketchum RJ, Brayman KL. Journal: J Surg Res; 1997 Apr; 69(1):23-32. PubMed ID: 9202642. Abstract: Gene therapy provides a potential technique to modify immunity in vitro and therefore may prolong graft survival in vivo. However, viral infection and gene transfer may damage target cells and interfere with biologic function. Viruses, including adenovirus, are known to be capable of modulating apoptosis and initiating cell death by either inducing or suppressing specific processes, depending on the virus and cell system studied. The effect of adenovirus on islet cell viability and function has not been examined in detail. In this study, the dose-dependent effect of an adenoviral vector on islet cell death and glucose-stimulated insulin secretion (GSIS) was investigated to establish a therapeutic window for the dose of viral vector administered. Isolated pancreatic rat islets were incubated with an adenovirus expressing a beta-galactosidase gene (AdHCMVsp1LacZ) at different viral concentrations [multiplicity of infection (MOI) 1:10, 1:100, and 1:1000]. Transfection rate, in vitro and in vivo islet viability, and occurrence of programmed cell death were determined 1, 3, and 7 days after transfection. Islets, transfected at MOI 1:10 and 1:100, demonstrated apoptosis not significantly different from nontransfected controls. Islets, transfected at MOI 1:1000, demonstrated a significant increase in apoptosis at 24 hr, which decreased over 7 days of culture. The increase in apoptosis was not reflected by a significant decrease in in vitro GSIS of surviving islet cells, as assessed by stimulation index following in vitro perifusion. SCID or nude mice transplanted with AdlacZ-transfected islets (MOI 1:100 and 1:1000) remained normoglycemic for > or = 30 days. These results demonstrate that transfection of islets using adenoviral vectors can be manipulated such that efficient expression of the gene product encoded by the transfected gene (beta-galactosidase) can be achieved at lower transfecting concentrations of the adenoviral vector (MOI 1:10, 20.2%; MOI 1:100, 30.7%) while preserving islet function. This efficiency of transfection may allow pretransplant manipulation of isolated islet cells without vector-specific alteration of islet function. In cases where high virus concentrations are required for efficient gene transfer (adequate expression of the transgene product), a deleterious effect of the vector on islet cell function, with increased cell loss due to increased apoptotic events, is predicted. Using the AdlacZ vector, cell loss by apoptotic mechanisms appears limited to the first days following coculture with high viral concentrations, and does not appear to influence in vitro or in vivo cell function of the surviving islet cells.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]