Diabetes, Vol 45, Issue 9 1197-1203, Copyright © 1996 by American Diabetes Association
Efficient gene transfer to dispersed human pancreatic islet cells in vitro using adenovirus-polylysine/DNA complexes or polycationic liposomes
J Saldeen, DT Curiel, DL Eizirik, A Andersson, E Strandell, K Buschard and N Welsh
Department of Medical Cell Biology, Uppsala University, Sweden.
The establishment of gene delivery systems that result in efficient
transfection of the pancreatic beta-cells may generate an important tool
for the study of IDDM and may also represent one critical step toward a
clinical application of gene transfer for the prevention or early treatment
of the disease. Using the reporter gene vectors pCAT and pCMV beta-gal, we
have investigated the efficiency of transfection mediated by calcium
phosphate precipitation, the monocationic liposome Lipofectin, the
polycationic liposome Lipofectamine, and adenovirus-polylysine (AdpL) DNA
complexes in human, mouse, rat, and fetal porcine islet cells. In all
species studied, calcium phosphate-mediated transfection resulted in lower
chloramphenicol acetyl transferase (CAT) activities than the other methods.
Intact human, mouse, and rat islets were poorly transfected by Lipofectin,
Lipofectamine, and AdpL. When dispersed by trypsin treatment, however,
human, mouse, rat, and fetal pig islect cells were efficiently transfected
by Lipofectamine. Moreover, transfection of dispersed human and mouse islet
cells using AdpL, also resulted in high CAT activities. The percentage of
cells staining positively for beta-galactosidase after transfection with
Lipofectamine was 49% for mouse, 56% for rat, and 57% for dispersed human
islet cells. Transfection of human islet cells using AdpL, however, yielded
70% beta-gal-positive cells. Fluorescence-activated cell sorting-purified
rat islet alpha- and beta-cells were transfected with similar efficiency
using Lipofectamine. CAT expression in human islet cells transfected with
either Lipofectamine or AdpL reached a peak value after 5-7 days, followed
by a gradual decline. It is concluded that transfection with AdpL or
Lipofectamine are both efficient means to achieve transient expression of
gene constructs in human and mouse islet cells, while for rat and fetal
porcine islet cells, Lipofectamine is the most efficient of the agents
investigated in this study.