Targeting of a cholecystokinin-DNA complex to pancreatic cells in vitro and in vivo
Data(s) |
01/01/1998
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Resumo |
The carboxy terminal octapeptide of cholecystokinin (CCK8) is a hormone that binds high affinity receptors in a number of tissues including pancreas and pancreatic tumours. As part of our studies to develop effective gene therapy for the treatment of pancreatic cancers, we have investigated various gene delivery systems that depend on CCK8 receptor targeting. In this paper,we describe the synthesis of a CCK8-DNA complex designed to deliver foreign DNA to cholecystokinin receptor-positive cells. CCK8 was ligated to avidin and then complexed to linearis biotinylated DNA (pSV-CAT). The uptake of P-32-labelled CCK8-DNA complex by rat pancreatic acini was linear with time over 4 h with 65-70% of uptake inhibited by 100 nM CCK8. The complex appeared to be internalised since it could not be removed by acid wash. When administered intra-arterially, the complex was rapidly removed from the circulation with no evidence of targeted delivery to the pancreas, However, following a single intraperitoneal dose, the pancreas accumulated-5- 8% of the total administered complex by 24 h. These results suggest that peptide-dependent gene delivery to CCK receptor positive cells in vivo is feasible but, when administered directly into the circulation, diffusional barriers across the endothelium may limit distribution to peripheral tissues. Intraperitoneal administration therefore may be a useful alternative for targeting the pancreas. |
Identificador | |
Idioma(s) |
eng |
Publicador |
Nature Publishing |
Palavras-Chave | #Biochemistry & Molecular Biology #Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology #Genetics & Heredity #Medicine, Research & Experimental #Cholecystokinin #Pancreas #Rat Delivery #Receptor #Receptor-mediated Endocytosis #Gene Delivery #Expression #Binding #System #Avidin #0601 Biochemistry and Cell Biology |
Tipo |
Journal Article |