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Therapeutic angiogenesis following intramuscular gene transfer of vascular endothelialgrowth factor 121 in a dog model of hindlimb ischemia

Authors :
Ojalvo, Ariana G.
Alina Seralena
Raysa Vazquez
Montequin, Jose F.
Nelson Santiago Vispo
Ricardo Silva
Alfredo Aldama
Yaquelin Puchades
Sorell, Luis T.
Pedro Lopez-Saura
Alfonso, María A.
Rafael Simón
Alfonso Ali
Seuc, Armando H.
Luis Javier Herrera
Source :
The Lens, Electronic Journal of Biotechnology v.6 n.3 2003, SciELO Chile, CONICYT Chile, instacron:CONICYT

Abstract

Reprint (BIP) Reprint (PDF) Abstract Article References Vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), an endothelial cell-specific mitogen, has been shown to promote therapeutic angiogenesis in animal models of critical limb ischemia. Ischemic skeletal muscle is advantageous for taking up and expressing foreign genes transferred as naked plasmid DNA. Accordingly, we investigated the hypothesis that intramuscular administration of naked plasmid DNA encoding the 121-amino acid isoform of VEGF could augment collateral development and tissue perfusion in a dog hindlimb ischemia model. Unilateral hindlimb ischemia was surgically induced in Beagle dogs. Ten days later, animals received intramuscular injections of pVEGF121 plasmid directly in the ischemic muscles. Angiogenic effects were evaluated by angiography, calf blood pressure ratio and vasomotor reserve analyses. Thirty days after gene transfer, angiographically recognizable collateral vessels were increased in pVEGF121-treated animals compared with controls. Improvement in perfusion to the ischemic limb was documented by a significantly higher calf blood pressure ratio for pVEGF121 (0.79 ± 0.05) versus controls (0.56 ± 0.14, P

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lens, Electronic Journal of Biotechnology v.6 n.3 2003, SciELO Chile, CONICYT Chile, instacron:CONICYT
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c601dccdad25baa4a13166ddb617cbaa