Abstract

Immediate loss of thrombomodulin activity in the endothelium of vein grafts has been demonstrated during 90 min exposure to arterial circulation; this loss of activity is ascribed as an important cause of early thrombosis. Conventional ex vivo gene transfection after vein harvest cannot cover this acute period immediately after implantation. We have established a highly efficient non-viral gene therapy protocol utilizing modified transferrin receptor-facilitated gene transfer. Using this technique, we examined whether in vivo thrombomodulin gene therapy, directed to the endothelium of rat veins 2 days prior to grafting, may prevent thromboresistance impairment of vein grafts under simulated arterial circulation. Abdomen of SD rat was opened and cationic liposome:transferrin:thrombomodulin gene complexes or the vector without DNAs were applied to the inferior vena cava of rats while blood flow was reduced by proximal and distal clamping. After 2 days, the transfected veins were harvested and thrombomodulin expression and thromboresistance properties determined before and after exposure to an artificial circuit. The trial of gene transfection using variable doses of DNAs confirmed that 7.5 microg of total DNAs was the most efficient quantity for thrombomodulin gene transfection to IVCs, although accompanying an increase of gene expression in other downstream organs. By transfection of the thrombomodulin gene in IVCs, the generation capacity of activated protein C in venous endothelium increased three-fold compared with veins treated with vector alone (P<0.01). Under simulated arterial circulation, perfusion of veins treated with vector alone decreased thrombomodulin activity to 36% of preperfused levels (P<0.01), whereas transfected grafts preserved the activity at normal vein endothelium levels even after perfusion. Consequently, the increase in endothelial thrombin activity induced by simulated arterial circulation was markedly attenuated in transfected veins (P<0.01), while immunohistochemistry confirmed the preservation of endothelial lining. Transferrin receptor-facilitated in vivo gene transfer to the inferior vena cava resulted in sufficient thrombomodulin gene expression immediately after graft implantation and subsequent maintenance of thromboresistance even after exposure to arterial pressure. Although further studies are needed, the present results suggest the possibility of gene therapy targeting acute phases of vein graft disease.

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.