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An effective method for adenoviral-mediated delivery of small interfering RNA into mesenchymal stem cells.

Authors :
Forte A
Napolitano MA
Cipollaro M
Giordano A
Cascino A
Galderisi U
Source :
Journal of cellular biochemistry [J Cell Biochem] 2007 Feb 01; Vol. 100 (2), pp. 293-302.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) promise as a main actor of cell-based therapeutic strategies, due to their intrinsic ability to differentiate along different mesenchymal cell lineages, able to repair the diseased or injured tissue in which they are localized. The application of MSCs in therapies requires an in depth knowledge of their biology and of the molecular mechanisms leading to MSC multilineage differentiation. The knockdown of target genes through small interfering RNA (siRNA) carried by adenoviruses (Ad) represents a valid tool for the study of the role of specific molecules in cell biology. Unfortunately, MSCs are poorly transfected by conventional Ad serotype 5 (Ad5) vectors. We set up a method to obtain a very efficient transduction of rat MSCs with low doses of unmodified Ad5, carrying the siRNA targeted against the mRNA coding for Rb2/p130 (Ad-siRNA-Rb2), which plays a fundamental role in cell differentiation. This method allowed a 95% transduction rate of Ad-siRNA in MSC, along with a siRNA-mediated 85% decrease of Rb2/p130 mRNA and a 70% decrease of Rb2/p130 protein 48 h after transduction with 50 multiplicities of infection (MOIs) of Ad5. The effect on Rb2/p130 protein persisted 15 days after transduction. Finally, Ad-siRNA did not compromise the viability of transduced MSCs neither induced any cell cycle modification. The effective Ad-siRNA-Rb2 we constructed, together with the efficient method of delivery in MSCs we set up, will allow an in depth analysis of the role of Rb2/p130 in MSC biology and multilineage differentiation.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0730-2312
Volume :
100
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of cellular biochemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
16888813
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/jcb.21025