» Articles » PMID: 17167496

Gene Therapy Progress and Prospects: Hydrodynamic Gene Delivery

Overview
Journal Gene Ther
Date 2006 Dec 15
PMID 17167496
Citations 77
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Over the last few years, hydrodynamic tail vein delivery has established itself as a simple, yet very effective method for gene transfer into small rodents. Hydrodynamic delivery of plasmid DNA expression vectors or small interfering RNA allows for a broad range of in vivo experiments, including the testing of regulatory elements, antibody generation, evaluation of gene therapy approaches, basic biology and disease model creation (non-heritable transgenics). The recent development of the hydrodynamic limb vein procedure provides a safe nucleic acid delivery technique with equally high efficiency in small and large research animals and, importantly, the prospects for clinical translation.

Citing Articles

HDI-STARR-seq: Condition-specific enhancer discovery in mouse liver in vivo.

Chang T, Waxman D BMC Genomics. 2024; 25(1):1240.

PMID: 39716078 PMC: 11668083. DOI: 10.1186/s12864-024-11162-9.


HDI-STARR-seq: Condition-specific enhancer discovery in mouse liver in vivo.

Chang T, Waxman D bioRxiv. 2024; .

PMID: 38915578 PMC: 11195054. DOI: 10.1101/2024.06.10.598329.


Enhancing the expression of a key mitochondrial enzyme at the inception of ischemia-reperfusion injury can boost recovery and halt the progression of acute kidney injury.

Corridon P Front Physiol. 2023; 14:1024238.

PMID: 36846323 PMC: 9945300. DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2023.1024238.


Early Subcellular Hepatocellular Alterations in Mice Post Hydrodynamic Transfection: An Explorative Study.

Yasser M, Ribback S, Evert K, Utpatel K, Annweiler K, Evert M Cancers (Basel). 2023; 15(2).

PMID: 36672277 PMC: 9857294. DOI: 10.3390/cancers15020328.


Therapeutic effect of multiple functional minicircle vector encoding anti-CD25/IL-10/CXCR3 in allograft rejection model.

Lim S, Shin Y, Cui S, Ko E, Yoo S, Chung B Korean J Intern Med. 2022; 37(5):1031-1049.

PMID: 35725307 PMC: 9449213. DOI: 10.3904/kjim.2021.299.