Young Jennifer L, Dean David A
Department of Pediatrics, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA.
Departments of Pediatrics and Biomedical Engineering, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA.
Adv Genet. 2015;89:49-88. doi: 10.1016/bs.adgen.2014.10.003. Epub 2014 Dec 11.
Electroporation has been used extensively to transfer DNA to bacteria, yeast, and mammalian cells in culture for the past 30 years. Over this time, numerous advances have been made, from using fields to facilitate cell fusion, delivery of chemotherapeutic drugs to cells and tissues, and most importantly, gene and drug delivery in living tissues from rodents to man. Electroporation uses electrical fields to transiently destabilize the membrane allowing the entry of normally impermeable macromolecules into the cytoplasm. Surprisingly, at the appropriate field strengths, the application of these fields to tissues results in little, if any, damage or trauma. Indeed, electroporation has even been used successfully in human trials for gene delivery for the treatment of tumors and for vaccine development. Electroporation can lead to between 100 and 1000-fold increases in gene delivery and expression and can also increase both the distribution of cells taking up and expressing the DNA as well as the absolute amount of gene product per cell (likely due to increased delivery of plasmids into each cell). Effective electroporation depends on electric field parameters, electrode design, the tissues and cells being targeted, and the plasmids that are being transferred themselves. Most importantly, there is no single combination of these variables that leads to greatest efficacy in every situation; optimization is required in every new setting. Electroporation-mediated in vivo gene delivery has proven highly effective in vaccine production, transgene expression, enzyme replacement, and control of a variety of cancers. Almost any tissue can be targeted with electroporation, including muscle, skin, heart, liver, lung, and vasculature. This chapter will provide an overview of the theory of electroporation for the delivery of DNA both in individual cells and in tissues and its application for in vivo gene delivery in a number of animal models.
在过去30年里,电穿孔已被广泛用于将DNA转移到培养的细菌、酵母和哺乳动物细胞中。在此期间,取得了许多进展,从利用电场促进细胞融合、将化疗药物递送至细胞和组织,到最重要的是,在从啮齿动物到人类的活体组织中进行基因和药物递送。电穿孔利用电场使细胞膜暂时不稳定,从而使通常无法透过的大分子进入细胞质。令人惊讶的是,在适当的场强下,将这些电场应用于组织时,即使有损伤或创伤也非常小。事实上,电穿孔甚至已成功用于人类基因递送试验,用于治疗肿瘤和疫苗开发。电穿孔可使基因递送和表达增加100至1000倍,还可增加摄取和表达DNA的细胞分布以及每个细胞中基因产物的绝对量(可能是由于进入每个细胞的质粒递送增加)。有效的电穿孔取决于电场参数、电极设计、靶向的组织和细胞以及所转移的质粒本身。最重要的是,没有单一的这些变量组合能在每种情况下都产生最大疗效;在每种新情况下都需要进行优化。电穿孔介导的体内基因递送已在疫苗生产、转基因表达、酶替代和多种癌症的控制方面证明非常有效。几乎任何组织都可以用电穿孔靶向,包括肌肉、皮肤、心脏、肝脏、肺和脉管系统。本章将概述电穿孔在单个细胞和组织中递送DNA的理论及其在多种动物模型中用于体内基因递送的应用。