4.7 Article

Regulated lentiviral NGF gene transfer controls rescue of medial septal cholinergic neurons

Journal

MOLECULAR THERAPY
Volume 11, Issue 6, Pages 916-925

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2005.01.007

Keywords

Alzheimer disease; gene therapy; nerve growth factor; neurotrophin; p75NTR; tetracycline

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Nerve growth factor (NGF) has been shown to promote survival and function of cholinergic neurons in the basal forebrain in various models of neuronal degeneration in rodents and primates. We examined whether a regulatable in vivo expression system can control the survival of cholinergic neurons after injury, using a tetracycline-regulated promoter (tet-off system) to modulate lentiviral NGF gene delivery. Two weeks after lesions to cholinergic neurons, significant cell rescue (65 +/- 8% neuron survival; P < 0.005 compared to controls) was observed when NGF expression was activated. Treatment with the tetracycline analog doxycycline to turn gene expression off resulted in a significant loss of cholinergic neurons (only 37 +/- 5% neurons remained, an amount that did not differ from untreated, lesioned controls). Animals treated with a constitutively active and robust nonregulated NGF expression system showed the same degree of neuronal rescue (73 +/- 8%) as animals treated with activated tet-regulated vectors. ELISA measurements confirmed that oral treatment of animals with doxycycline reduced NGF protein levels to levels in untreated control subjects. These data demonstrate for the first time that NGF delivery by lentiviral gene transfer using tetracycline-regulated promoters can completely regulate neuronal rescue and protein production in the brain.

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