Retroviral gene transfer inXenopus cell lines and embryos

1996 
A new class of retroviral vector pseudotypes have an expanded host species range and can be concentrated to high titers by ultracentrifugation. These pantropic vectors contain the genome of the murine leukemia virus-based vectors and the envelope protein of vesicular stomatitis virus substituted for the amphotropic envelope protein. We tested (a) the ability of pseudotyped (pantropic) and unmodified (amphotropic) vectors to stably infect three diffeentXenopus laevis cell lines, including one derived from the embryonic retina; and (b) the ability of the concentrated pseudotyped virus to infect embryos and to mediate foreign gene expression in the embryonic CNS. Expression of the neomycin phosphotransferase gene and single copy integration of the provirus into the genome of the cell lines was demonstrated. Surprisingly, the amphotropic and pantropic vectors generated neomycin-resistant clones with similar efficiency. PCR amplification of genomic DNA from single stage 10, 20, and 25 embryos microinjected in the blastocoel or neural tube cavities with concentrated pantropic vector (108 cfu/ml) revealed proviral DNA. Microinjection of a concentrated pantropic vector containing the coding sequence for the β-galactosidase gene into the neural tube lumen of 24-h embryos yielded β-galactosidase expressing cells in the brain. Thus, retroviral vectors provide an additional approach to existing strategies for gene transfer inXenopus embryos and cell lines.
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