Transduction of skeletal muscles with common reporter genes can promote muscle fiber degeneration and inflammation.

Recombinant adeno-associated viral vectors (rAAV vectors) are promising tools for delivering transgenes to skeletal muscle, in order to study the mechanisms that control the muscle phenotype, and to ameliorate diseases that perturb muscle homeostasis. Many studies have employed rAAV vectors carrying...

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Main Authors: Catherine E Winbanks, Claudia Beyer, Hongwei Qian, Paul Gregorevic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3520959?pdf=render
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author Catherine E Winbanks
Claudia Beyer
Hongwei Qian
Paul Gregorevic
author_facet Catherine E Winbanks
Claudia Beyer
Hongwei Qian
Paul Gregorevic
author_sort Catherine E Winbanks
collection DOAJ
description Recombinant adeno-associated viral vectors (rAAV vectors) are promising tools for delivering transgenes to skeletal muscle, in order to study the mechanisms that control the muscle phenotype, and to ameliorate diseases that perturb muscle homeostasis. Many studies have employed rAAV vectors carrying reporter genes encoding for β-galactosidase (β-gal), human placental alkaline phosphatase (hPLAP), and green fluorescent protein (GFP) as experimental controls when studying the effects of manipulating other genes. However, it is not clear to what extent these reporter genes can influence signaling and gene expression signatures in skeletal muscle, which may confound the interpretation of results obtained in experimentally manipulated muscles. Herein, we report a strong pro-inflammatory effect of expressing reporter genes in skeletal muscle. Specifically, we show that the administration of rAAV6:hPLAP vectors to the hind limb muscles of mice is associated with dose- and time-dependent macrophage recruitment, and skeletal muscle damage. Dose-dependent expression of hPLAP also led to marked activity of established pro-inflammatory IL-6/Stat3, TNFα, IKKβ and JNK signaling in lysates obtained from homogenized muscles. These effects were independent of promoter type, as expression cassettes featuring hPLAP under the control of constitutive CMV and muscle-specific CK6 promoters both drove cellular responses when matched for vector dose. Importantly, the administration of rAAV6:GFP vectors did not induce muscle damage or inflammation except at the highest doses we examined, and administration of a transgene-null vector (rAAV6:MCS) did not cause damage or inflammation at any of the doses tested, demonstrating that GFP-expressing, or transgene-null vectors may be more suitable as experimental controls. The studies highlight the importance of considering the potential effects of reporter genes when designing experiments that examine gene manipulation in vivo.
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spelling doaj.art-d9b0e167aefd4254a2e721a5cf5cff0b2022-12-22T00:07:50ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-01712e5162710.1371/journal.pone.0051627Transduction of skeletal muscles with common reporter genes can promote muscle fiber degeneration and inflammation.Catherine E WinbanksClaudia BeyerHongwei QianPaul GregorevicRecombinant adeno-associated viral vectors (rAAV vectors) are promising tools for delivering transgenes to skeletal muscle, in order to study the mechanisms that control the muscle phenotype, and to ameliorate diseases that perturb muscle homeostasis. Many studies have employed rAAV vectors carrying reporter genes encoding for β-galactosidase (β-gal), human placental alkaline phosphatase (hPLAP), and green fluorescent protein (GFP) as experimental controls when studying the effects of manipulating other genes. However, it is not clear to what extent these reporter genes can influence signaling and gene expression signatures in skeletal muscle, which may confound the interpretation of results obtained in experimentally manipulated muscles. Herein, we report a strong pro-inflammatory effect of expressing reporter genes in skeletal muscle. Specifically, we show that the administration of rAAV6:hPLAP vectors to the hind limb muscles of mice is associated with dose- and time-dependent macrophage recruitment, and skeletal muscle damage. Dose-dependent expression of hPLAP also led to marked activity of established pro-inflammatory IL-6/Stat3, TNFα, IKKβ and JNK signaling in lysates obtained from homogenized muscles. These effects were independent of promoter type, as expression cassettes featuring hPLAP under the control of constitutive CMV and muscle-specific CK6 promoters both drove cellular responses when matched for vector dose. Importantly, the administration of rAAV6:GFP vectors did not induce muscle damage or inflammation except at the highest doses we examined, and administration of a transgene-null vector (rAAV6:MCS) did not cause damage or inflammation at any of the doses tested, demonstrating that GFP-expressing, or transgene-null vectors may be more suitable as experimental controls. The studies highlight the importance of considering the potential effects of reporter genes when designing experiments that examine gene manipulation in vivo.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3520959?pdf=render
spellingShingle Catherine E Winbanks
Claudia Beyer
Hongwei Qian
Paul Gregorevic
Transduction of skeletal muscles with common reporter genes can promote muscle fiber degeneration and inflammation.
PLoS ONE
title Transduction of skeletal muscles with common reporter genes can promote muscle fiber degeneration and inflammation.
title_full Transduction of skeletal muscles with common reporter genes can promote muscle fiber degeneration and inflammation.
title_fullStr Transduction of skeletal muscles with common reporter genes can promote muscle fiber degeneration and inflammation.
title_full_unstemmed Transduction of skeletal muscles with common reporter genes can promote muscle fiber degeneration and inflammation.
title_short Transduction of skeletal muscles with common reporter genes can promote muscle fiber degeneration and inflammation.
title_sort transduction of skeletal muscles with common reporter genes can promote muscle fiber degeneration and inflammation
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3520959?pdf=render
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