Jaagsiekte Sheep Retrovirus Env Protein Stabilizes Retrovirus Vectors against Inactivation by Lung Surfactant, Centrifugation, and Freeze-Thaw Cycling
AUTOR(ES)
Coil, David A.
FONTE
American Society for Microbiology
RESUMO
Jaagsiekte sheep retrovirus (JSRV) replicates in the lungs of sheep and causes the secretion of copious lung fluid containing the virus. Adaptation of JSRV to infection and replication in the lung and its apparent resistance to the denaturing activity of lung fluid suggest that vectors based on JSRV would be useful for gene therapy targeted to the lung. We show here that a retrovirus vector bearing the JSRV Env is stable during treatment with lung surfactant while an otherwise identical vector bearing an amphotropic Env is inactivated. Furthermore, the JSRV vector was stable during centrifugation, allowing facile vector concentration, and showed no loss of activity after six freeze-thaw cycles. However, the JSRV vector was inactivated by standard disinfectants, indicating that JSRV vectors pose no unusual safety risk related to their improved stability under other conditions.
ACESSO AO ARTIGO
http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=115133Documentos Relacionados
- Galactose-Specific Lectins Protect Isolated Thylakoids against Freeze-Thaw Damage.
- Relative Sensitivity of Photosynthesis and Respiration to Freeze-Thaw Stress in Herbaceous Species 1: Importance of Realistic Freeze-Thaw Protocols
- Cryotherapy of proliferative sickle retinopathy, II: triple freeze-thaw cycle.
- Alterations in Chloroplast Thylakoids during an in Vitro Freeze-Thaw Cycle 1
- Role of growth phase and ethanol in freeze-thaw stress resistance of Saccharomyces cerevisiae.