Infectious Retrovirus Is Inactivated by Serum but Not by Cerebrospinal Fluid or Fluid from Tumor Bed in Patients with Malignant Glioma
Open Access
- 1 November 1995
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Japanese Journal of Cancer Research
- Vol. 86 (11), 1010-1013
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1349-7006.1995.tb03013.x
Abstract
Intravenous gene transfer using recombinant retroviruses tends to suffer from a low infectious viral titer when conducted in vivo. This is, in part, caused by complement‐mediated proteolytic inactivation of the retrovirus in human serum. However, if the retroviruses were directly injected into the brain, they might not be inactivated. Supernatant from amphotropic retrovirus‐producing cells harboring the BAG vectors was incubated with sera or cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of patients with gliomas or unrelated disorders. The retroviruses were severely inactivated in sera. However, no such inactivation was noted in CSF or fluid from the tumor bed of glioma patients. These data suggest that gene transfer using recombinant retroviruses could be done into the cavity after removal of the tumor in glioma patients.Keywords
This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Simplified General Method for Determination of Recombinant Retrovirus Titers.Cell Structure and Function, 1995
- Gene Therapy for the Treatment of Malignant Brain Tumors with In Vivo Tumor Transduction with the Herpes Simplex Thymidine Kinase Gene/Ganciclovir System. Iowa Methodist Medical Center, Des Moines, IowaHuman Gene Therapy, 1994
- Gene Transfer into Experimental Brain Tumors Mediated by Adenovirus, Herpes Simplex Virus, and Retrovirus VectorsHuman Gene Therapy, 1994
- Improved Methods of Retroviral Vector Transduction and Production for Gene TherapyHuman Gene Therapy, 1994
- Treatment of Severe Combined Immunodeficiency Disease (SCID) due to Adenosine Deaminase Deficiency with CD34+Selected Autologous Peripheral Blood Cells Transduced with a Human ADA Gene (Amendment). National Institutes of HealthHuman Gene Therapy, 1993
- Retrovirus‐mediated Gene Transfer Targeted to Malignant Glioma Cells in Murine BrainJapanese Journal of Cancer Research, 1992
- Gene therapy of maliganant brain tumors: A rat glioma line bearing the herpes simplex virus type 1‐thymidine kinase gene and wild type retrovirus kills other tumor cellsJournal of Neuroscience Research, 1992
- In Vivo Gene Transfer with Retroviral Vector-Producer Cells for Treatment of Experimental Brain TumorsScience, 1992
- Correction of ADA deficiency in human T lymphocytes using retroviral-mediated gene transfer.1991
- High-efficiency gene transfer into mammalian cells: generation of helper-free recombinant retrovirus with broad mammalian host range.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1984