4.7 Article

Therapeutic angiogenesis due to balanced single-vector delivery of VEGF and PDGF-BB

Journal

FASEB JOURNAL
Volume 26, Issue 6, Pages 2486-2497

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1096/fj.11-197400

Keywords

ischemia; gene therapy; adenoviral vectors

Funding

  1. American Heart Association [043031]
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation [310030-127426]
  3. EU [CP-IP 214402]
  4. Deutsche-Forschungsgemeinschaft [DE 740/1-1]
  5. U.S. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [HL-24136, HL-59157, CA-082923]
  6. NIH [AG-009521, HL-065572, AG-020961, AG-024987]
  7. Baxter Foundation
  8. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [310030_127426] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Therapeutic angiogenesis by delivery of vascular growth factors is an attractive strategy for treating debilitating occlusive vascular diseases, yet clinical trials have thus far failed to show efficacy. As a result, limb amputation remains a common outcome for muscle ischemia due to severe atherosclerotic disease, with an overall incidence of 100 per million people in the United States per year. A challenge has been that the angiogenic master regulator vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) induces dysfunctional vessels, if expressed outside of a narrow dosage window. We tested the hypothesis that codelivery of platelet-derived growth factor-BB (PDGF-BB), which recruits pericytes, could induce normal angiogenesis in skeletal muscle irrespective of VEGF levels. Coexpression of VEGF and PDGF-BB encoded by separate vectors in different cells or in the same cells only partially corrected aberrant angiogenesis. In marked contrast, coexpression of both factors in every cell at a fixed relative level via a single bicistronic vector led to robust, uniformly normal angiogenesis, even when VEGF expression was high and heterogeneous. Notably, in an ischemic hindlimb model, single-vector expression led to efficient growth of collateral arteries, revascularization, increased blood flow, and reduced tissue damage. Furthermore, these results were confirmed in a clinically applicable gene therapy approach by adenoviral-mediated delivery of the bicistronic vector. We conclude that coordinated expression of VEGF and PDGF-BB via a single vector constitutes a novel strategy for harnessing the potency of VEGF to induce safe and efficacious angiogenesis.-Banfi, A., von Degenfeld, G., Gianni-Barrera, R., Reginato, S., Merchant, M. J., McDonald, D. M., Blau, H. M. Therapeutic angiogenesis due to balanced single-vector delivery of VEGF and PDGF-BB. FASEB J. 26, 2486-2497 (2012). www.fasebj.org

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available