Publication | Open Access
Repression of GAD Autoantigen Expression in Pancreas β-Cells by Delivery of Antisense Plasmid/PEG-g-PLL Complex
30
Citations
32
References
2001
Year
It was previously reported that silencing of the expression of glutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) in transgenic nonobese diabetic (NOD) mice completely protected islet beta-cells against development of diabetes. This suggests that the repression of GAD autoantigen by somatic gene delivery can prevent autoimmune destruction of pancreatic beta-cells. To repress GAD expression in islet beta-cells, we delivered an antisense GAD mRNA expression plasmid (pRIP-AS-GAD) using poly(ethylene glycol)-grafted poly-L-lysine (PEG-g-PLL) as a gene carrier. In a gel retardation assay, the pRIP-AS-GAD/PEG-g-PLL complex was completely retarded above a weight ratio of 1:1.5 (plasmid: PEG-g-PLL). PEG-g-PLL protected the plasmid DNA from DNase I for more than 60 minutes. In a reporter gene transfection assay, PEG-g-PLL showed the highest transfection efficiency at a weight ratio of 1:3. We also transfected pRIP-AS-GAD/PEG-g-PLL complex into a GAD-producing mouse insulinoma (MIN6) cell line. The antisense mRNA was expressed specifically in beta-cells and expression was dependent on glucose level. The repression of GAD after transfection of pRIP-AS-GAD was confirmed by immunoblot assay. In addition, in vivo expression of antisense RNA in pancreas was confirmed by RT-PCR after intravenous injection of the complex into mice. Therefore, our study revealed that the pRIP-AS-GAD/PEG-g-PLL system is applicable for the repression of GAD autoantigen expression.
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