Towards gene therapy based on femtosecond optical transfection
2012
Gene therapy poses a great promise in treatment and prevention of a variety of diseases. However, crucial to studying
and the development of this therapeutic approach is a reliable and efficient technique of gene and drug delivery into
primary cell types. These cells, freshly derived from an organ or tissue, mimic more closely the in vivo state and present
more physiologically relevant information compared to cultured cell lines. However, primary cells are known to be
difficult to transfect and are typically transfected using viral methods, which are not only questionable in the context of
an in vivo application but rely on time consuming vector construction and may also result in cell de-differentiation and
loss of functionality. At the same time, well established non-viral methods do not guarantee satisfactory efficiency and
viability. Recently, optical laser mediated poration of cell membrane has received interest as a viable gene and drug
delivery technique. It has been shown to deliver a variety of biomolecules and genes into cultured mammalian cells;
however, its applicability to primary cells remains to be proven. We demonstrate how optical transfection can be an
enabling technique in research areas, such as neuropathic pain, neurodegenerative diseases, heart failure and immune or
inflammatory-related diseases. Several primary cell types are used in this study, namely cardiomyocytes, dendritic cells,
and neurons. We present our recent progress in optimizing this technique's efficiency and post-treatment cell viability
for these types of cells and discuss future directions towards in vivo applications.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
0
References
1
Citations
NaN
KQI