In vivo analysis of retroviral gene transfer to chondrocytes within collagen scaffolds for the treatment of osteochondral defects.

  • Peter Ueblacker
  • Bettina Wagner
  • Stephan Vogt
  • Gian Salzmann
  • Gabi Wexel
  • Achim Krüger
  • Christian Plank
  • Thomas Brill
  • Karin Specht
  • Tilla Hennig
  • Ulrike Schillinger
  • Andreas B Imhoff
  • Vladimir Martinek
  • Bernd Gansbacher

Abstract

To examine a retroviral gene transfer to chondrocytes in vitro and in vivo in tissue-engineered cell-collagen constructs articular chondrocytes from rabbits and humans were isolated and transduced with VSV.G pseudotyped murine leukemia virus-derived retroviral vectors. Viral supernatants were generated by transient transfection of 293T cells using the pBullet retroviral vector carrying the nlslacZ gene, a Moloney murine leukemia virus gag/pol plasmid and a VSV.G coding plasmid. Transduction efficiency was analyzed by fluorescence-activated-cell-sorter analysis and transduced autologous chondrocytes from rabbits were seeded on collagen-scaffolds and implanted into osteochondral defects in the patellar groove of the rabbit's femur (n=10). LacZ-expression was analyzed by X-gal staining on total knee explants and histological sections. Retroviral transduction efficiency exceeded 92.3% (SEM+/-3.5%) in rabbit articular chondrocytes, 74.7% (SEM+/-1.8%) in human articular chondrocytes and 52.7% (SEM+/-5.8%) in osteoarthritic human chondrocytes. Reporter gene expression remained high after 15 weeks in 75.7% (SEM+/-8.2%) of transduced rabbit articular chondrocytes. In vivo, intraarticular beta-galactosidase activity could be determined in the majority of implanted chondrocytes in the osteochondral defects after 4 weeks.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheDeutsch
Aufsatznummer30
ISSN0142-9612
StatusVeröffentlicht - 2007
pubmed 17629939