Abstract

Poliovirus replicon vectors transiently express foreign proteins selectively in motor neurons of the anterior horn of the spinal cord. Here we intraspinally inoculated mice transgenic for the poliovirus receptor (PVR) with replicons encoding murine tumor necrosis factor alpha (mTNF-alpha). We detected high-level expression of mTNF-alpha in the spinal cords of these animals at 8-12 h post inoculation; this returned to background by 72 h. The mice exhibited ataxia and tail atony, whereas animals given a replicon encoding green fluorescent protein (GFP) exhibited no neurological symptoms. Histology of spinal cords from mice given the replicon encoding mTNF-alpha revealed neuronal chromatolysis, reactive astrogliosis, decreased expression of myelin basic protein, and demyelination. These animals recovered with only slight residual damage. This study shows that replicon vectors have potential for targeted delivery of therapeutic proteins to the central nervous system and provide a new approach for treatment of spinal cord trauma and neurological disease.

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