Systemic Effect of Human Growth Hormone after Intramuscular Injection of a Single Dose of a Muscle-Specific Gene Medicine

1998 
ABSTRACT A muscle-specific gene medicine is described that provides for long-term secretion of biologically active human growth hormone (hGH) from skeletal muscle into the systemic circulation. The hGH gene medicine is composed of a muscle-specific hGH plasmid expression system complexed with a protective, interactive, non-condensing (PINC™) delivery system. The muscle-specific gene expression system, pSK-hGH-GH, was constructed by linking the promoter/enhancer regions of chicken skeletal α-actin to hGH gene. C2C12 myoblast transfection with pSK-hGH-GH resulted in the synthesis of hGH in a muscle-specific manner. Direct injection into rat tibialis cranialis muscle of pSK-hGH-GH complexed with a polymeric PINC delivery system, polyvinylpyrrolidone (PVP), produced hGH levels in muscle that were 10- to 15-fold higher compared with plasmid formulated in saline at 14 days post-injection. Intratracheal instillation in rat lung of pSK-hGH-GH did not produce significantly detectable levels of hGH. In hypophysecto...
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