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Biotech / Medical : ARIAD Pharmaceuticals -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: r. peter Dale who wrote (209)12/13/1997 12:34:00 AM
From: squetch  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 4474
 
jci.org is full article for:
Pharmacologic Control of a Humanized Gene
Therapy System Implanted into Nude Mice

Shannon R. Magari, Victor M. Rivera, John D. Iuliucci, Michael Gilman, and
Franklin Cerasoli Jr.

ARIAD Gene Therapeutics, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139

Systemic delivery of specific therapeutic proteins by a parenteral route of administration is a recognized practice in the
management of several gene defects and acquired diseases. As an alternative to repetitive parenteral administration, gene
therapy may provide a novel means for systemic delivery of therapeutic proteins while improving patient compliance and
therapeutic efficacy. However, for gene therapy to be an efficacious and safe approach to the clinical management of such
diseases, gene expression must be tightly regulated. These investigations demonstrate precise in vivo control of protein
expression from cells that are engineered to secrete human growth hormone (hGH) in response to stimulation by rapamycin.
The cells were implanted intramuscularly into nu/nu mice and stimulated by intravenous or oral administration of rapamycin. In
vivo experiments demonstrate that the activity and pharmacokinetics of rapamycin determine the level of serum hGH that result
from the engineered cells. In addition, responsiveness of the cells to rapamycin, number of cells implanted, hGH expression
kinetics, and the pharmacokinetics of hGH itself, also influence the circulating levels of hGH after rapamycin stimulation.
Controlled manipulation of several of these parameters, either independently or in combination, allows for precise regulation of
circulating hGH concentration in vivo. (J. Clin. Invest. 1997. 100:2865-2872.)