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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Experimental dermatology 8 (1999), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1600-0625
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Recent progress with innovative, experimental gene therapy approaches in animals, and recent improvements in our understanding and manipulation of stem cells, gene expression and gene delivery systems, have raised plenty of hopes in essentially all branches of clinical medicine that hitherto untreatable or poorly manageable diseases will soon become amenable to treatment. Few other organ systems have received such enthusiastic reviews in recent years as to the chances and prospects of gene therapy as the skin, with its excellent accessibility and its pools of – seemingly – readily manipulated epithelial stem cells (cf. Cotsarelis et al., Exp Dermatol 1999: 8: 80–88).However, as in other sectors of clinical medicine, the actual implementation of general gene therapy strategies in clinical practice has been faced with a range of serious difficulties (cf. Smith, Lancet 1999: 354 (suppl 1): 1–4; Lattime & Gerson (eds.), Gene Therapy of Cancer, Academic Press, San Diego, 1999). Thus, it is critically important to carefully distinguish unfounded hype from justified hope in this embryonal area of dermatologic therapy, to discuss in detail what can be realistically expected from cutaneous gene therapy approaches in the next few years, and importantly, what kind of promises should not be made to our patients at this time.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Copenhagen : Munksgaard International Publishers
    Experimental dermatology 9 (2000), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1600-0625
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract: We have analysed the consequences of liposome mediated gene transfer into human primary epidermal keratinocytes and compared non-Epstein–Barr Virus (EBV) and EBV based expression vectors that carry the genes encoding human Growth Hormone (hGH) or Enhanced Green Fluorescent Protein (EGFP). Different kinetics between the non-EBV and EBV based vectors were revealed upon subcultivation of hGH transfected keratinocytes. The keratinocytes transfected with non-EBV based vector showed a rapid reduction in hGH production. Although the EBV based vector resulted in more stable expression, this was also reduced over time. Chromatin inactivation by deacetylation was investigated by treatment with sodium butyrate and found not to be the reason for the decreasing expression. Keratinocytes divided into subpopulations enriched for either stem cells or transit amplifying cells, based on β1-integrin expression and function, do not differ significantly with respect to susceptibility to productive transfection. However, when the keratinocytes were transfected with the EGFP gene and sorted live by FACS into EGFP negative and positive populations, only the negative cells were capable of forming significant numbers of colonies. This is consistent with the observation that the ability to incorporate BrdU was dramatically reduced in the EGFP expressing population within 24–48 h post transfection indicating an almost complete cell cycle arrest. p53 levels were unaffected by the procedures, and the keratinocyte cell line HaCat, mutated in both p53 alleles, also shows a marked reduction in clonogenic potency upon transfection. There was a slight increase of TUNEL positive apoptotic nuclei in the positive population at early time points. However, the apoptotic index was still very low. When we measured the frequency of involucrin expressing cells, we found an increase in the productively transfected population over time indicating an initiation of terminal differentiation. In contrast to the transfected cultures, keratinocytes that were transduced using a retroviral vector showed no decrease in colony forming efficiency. In conclusion we find that transgene expressing cells from transfected cultures of epidermal keratinocytes undergo cell cycle arrest and initiate terminal differentiation by mechanisms which are independent of p53 levels.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    ISSN: 1573-2665
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Two families with medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency due to compound heterozygosity are described. All patients have a 13 bp insertion in exon 11 of one allele at the MCAD gene locus. In the other allele patients in one of the families harbour the prevalent G985 mutation, and the other family possess an unidentified mutation causing reduced levels of MCAD mRNA. We demonstrate that the disease in these families is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait. Individuals heterozygous for the mutations show heterozygous/control levels of β-oxidation activities in cultured fibroblasts (9.1–16.3 pmol/min per mg protein; control 10–17 pmol/min per mg protein), and in the excretion of the ‘β-oxidation metabolites’, hexanoylglycine (〈2 µmol/mmol creatinine), suberylglycine (〈2 µmol/mmol creatinine) and phenylpropionylglycine (〈2 µmol/mmol creatinine). This shows that there is no ‘negative dominance’ from the mutant monomeric protein onto the normal ones, in accordance with the finding of low levels of MCAD mRNA from the allele harbouring the 13 bp insertion as well as the allele with the unidentified mutation, and the low steady-state level of enzyme protein expressed from the G985-bearing allele. In the family possessing the G985 and the 13 bp insertion mutations, two asymptomatic compound heterozygous individuals were detected. They exhibited elevated excretion of hexanoylglycine (5–15 µmol/mmol creatinine) and suberylglycine (4–13 µmol/mmol creatinine), together with β-oxidation activity in fibroblasts in the homozygous range (2.9 pmol/min per mg protein), showing a lack of correlation between the genotype, some biochemical parameters and the clinical phenotype.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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