Cell Transplantation (Mar 1995)

Synthetic Vascular Grafts Seeded with Genetically Modified Endothelium in the Dog: Evaluation of the Effect of Seeding Technique and Retroviral Vector on Cell Persistence in Vivo

  • Jill E. Sackman DVM, PhD,
  • Michael B. Freeman,
  • Mark G. Petersen,
  • Zuhair Allebban,
  • Glenn P. Niemeyer,
  • Clinton D. Lothrop

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/096368979500400206
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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Unique characteristics of endothelium make it an attractive target cell for gene transfer. Genetically modified endothelial cells (ECs) seeded on synthetic vascular grafts offer the potential to control neointimal hyperplasia, decrease graft thrombogenicity and improve small diameter graft patency. This study addresses the issue of synthetic vascular graft colonization with endothelial cells transduced with noninducible retroviral marker genes in the dog. Autologous endothelial cells were enzymatically harvested and transduced with either the bacterial NeoR gene or human growth hormone gene using retroviral vectors. All transduced cells were positive by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification for the transduced gene sequence prior to graft seeding. Transduced ECs were seeded on Dacron grafts (n = 3) pre-clotted with autologous blood. These grafts exhibited complete endothelialization at times from 250 to 360 days. Recovered DNA, however, was negative for the transduced gene sequence when analyzed by PCR and Southern blotting. Expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE) was evaluated (n = 8) using several different cell seeding protocols. Grafts were seeded at 3 densities (ranging from 6 × 103 to 1.5 × 105 cells/cm2) and 2 different adherence times. Seeding substrate was also evaluated. Grafts were either preclotted with whole blood or incubated with 20 or 120 μg/ml fibronectin for 60 min. Graft biopsies were evaluated from 2 to 52 wk. Limited endothelialization was present in 4 dogs as early as 2 wk, but never progressed to full luminal coverage. The remaining dogs failed to ever exhibit any luminal EC adherence. Two dogs with limited EC coverage had positive DNA by PCR for the NeoR gene sequence at 2 and 3 wk. In contrast to transduced EC's, nontransduced EC colonization of ePTFE was complete at 2 wk when seeded under conditions that transduced cells had failed to persist. Neither seeding density, adherence time, seeding substrate or retroviral vector used influenced the uniformly poor graft coverage seen with transduced cells. Results of this study indicate that despite successful gene transfer using 4 different retroviral vectors, transduced endothelial cells seeded under varying conditions appear altered in their ability to stably adhere and colonize synthetic vascular grafts in vivo.