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  4. Survival of encapsulated human primary fibroblasts and erythropoietin expression under xenogeneic conditions
 
research article

Survival of encapsulated human primary fibroblasts and erythropoietin expression under xenogeneic conditions

Schwenter, F.
•
Schneider, B. L.
•
Pralong, W. F.
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2004
Human Gene Therapy

Allogeneic cells are the most attractive source for cell transplantation, as the use of xenogeneic cells is hampered by safety concerns and the use of autologous cells involves practical difficulties. The immune rejection of allogeneic cells can be overcome by physical immunoprotection provided by polymer encapsulation. To study the variability of cell and donor sources, we compared different primary human cells as candidates for gene therapy-mediated delivery of human erythropoietin (hEpo). DARC-3.1 fibroblasts, MDX-01 fibroblasts, and ARPE-19 retinal pigment epithelial cells were encapsulated into polyethersulfone hollow fibers and implanted for 1 month in nude mice as well as in immunocompetent and FK506-immunosuppressed mice to test their in vivo resistance, with the assumption that xenogeneic conditions constitute a stringent model for human application. DARC-3.1 fibroblasts showed the best survival, prompting us to evaluate cell lineages from the same donor (DARC-3.2) or another donor (DARC-4.3 and DARC-4.4). With the exception of DARC-4.3, the remaining three lineages showed comparable survival in immunocompetent C3H and DBA/2J mice. DARC-3.1 fibroblasts were retrovirally engineered with hEpo cDNA, reaching a secretion level of 170 IU of hEpo per 10(6) cells per day. Encapsulated DARC-3.1-hEpo cells led to significantly increased hematocrits in the various hosts and under various transplantation conditions. The present study shows that encapsulated primary human DARC-3.1 fibroblasts are able to survive under xenogeneic conditions and, once engineered with hEpo cDNA, to increase the hematocrit of transplanted mice.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1089/1043034041361172
Web of Science ID

WOS:000222786900005

Author(s)
Schwenter, F.
Schneider, B. L.
Pralong, W. F.
Deglon, N.  
Aebischer, P.  
Date Issued

2004

Published in
Human Gene Therapy
Volume

15

Issue

7

Start page

669

End page

80

Subjects

Animals

•

Cell Survival

•

Cell Transplantation/ methods

•

Erythropoietin/analysis/biosynthesis/ genetics

•

Fibroblasts/cytology/metabolism/ transplantation

•

Hematocrit

•

Humans

•

Mice

•

Mice

•

Inbred DBA

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Polymers/chemistry

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Sulfones/chemistry

•

Transplantation

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Heterologous

•

Mice

Note

Division of Surgical Research and Gene Therapy Center, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois, Lausanne University Medical School, CH-1005 Lausanne, Switzerland.

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LEN  
Available on Infoscience
March 9, 2007
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/3777
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