Molecular Medicine |
From the Cardiovascular Gene Therapy Laboratory (S.R., P.N., F.A., V.C.), Transgène S.A., Strasbourg, France; Department of Pathology (A.M.-N.), Hôpital de Hautepierre, Strasbourg, France; Molecular Biology of Differentiation Laboratory (A.P., D.P.), D. Diderot University, Paris, France; and Department of Pathology (G.G.), University of Geneva-CMU, Geneva, Switzerland.
Correspondence to Dr Valerie Calenda, Transgène S.A., Cardiovascular Gene Therapy Laboratory, 11 rue de Molsheim, 67082 Strasbourg, Cedex, France. E-mail calenda{at}transgene.fr
AbstractGene
transfer with adenoviral vectors is an attractive approach for the
treatment of atherosclerosis and restenosis. However, because
expression of a therapeutic gene in nontarget tissues may have
deleterious effects, artery-specific expression is desirable. Although
expression vectors containing transcriptional regulatory elements of
genes expressed solely in smooth muscle cells (SMCs) have proved
efficient to restrict expression of the transgene, their use in the
clinical setting can be limited by their reduced strength. In the
present study, we show that low levels of transgene expression are
obtained with the smooth muscle (SM)-specific SM22
promoter compared
with the viral cytomegalovirus (CMV) enhancer/promoter. We have
generated chimeric transcriptional cassettes containing either a SM
(SM-myosin heavy chain) or a skeletal muscle (creatine kinase) enhancer
combined with the SM22
promoter. With both constructs we observed
significantly stronger expression that remains SM-specific. In vivo,
reporter gene expression was restricted to arterial SMCs with no
detectable signal at remote sites. Moreover, when interferon-
expression was driven by one of these two chimeras, SMC growth was
inhibited as efficiently as with the CMV promoter. Finally, we
demonstrate that neointima formation in the rat carotid balloon injury
model was reduced to the same extent by adenoviral gene transfer of
interferon-
driven either by the SM-myosin heavy chain
enhancer/SM22
promoter or the CMV promoter. These results indicate
that such vectors can be useful for the treatment of hyperproliferative
vascular
disorders.
Key Words: smooth muscle myosin creatine kinase interferon-
restenosis gene transfer
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