Rando T A, Blau H M
Department of Molecular Pharmacology, Stanford University School of Medicine, California 94305-5332.
J Cell Biol. 1994 Jun;125(6):1275-87. doi: 10.1083/jcb.125.6.1275.
The transplantation of cultured myoblasts into mature skeletal muscle is the basis for a new therapeutic approach to muscle and non-muscle diseases: myoblast-mediated gene therapy. The success of myoblast transplantation for correction of intrinsic muscle defects depends on the fusion of implanted cells with host myofibers. Previous studies in mice have been problematic because they have involved transplantation of established myogenic cell lines or primary muscle cultures. Both of these cell populations have disadvantages: myogenic cell lines are tumorigenic, and primary cultures contain a substantial percentage of non-myogenic cells which will not fuse to host fibers. Furthermore, for both cell populations, immune suppression of the host has been necessary for long-term retention of transplanted cells. To overcome these difficulties, we developed novel culture conditions that permit the purification of mouse myoblasts from primary cultures. Both enriched and clonal populations of primary myoblasts were characterized in assays of cell proliferation and differentiation. Primary myoblasts were dependent on added bFGF for growth and retained the ability to differentiate even after 30 population doublings. The fate of the pure myoblast populations after transplantation was monitored by labeling the cells with the marker enzyme beta-galactosidase (beta-gal) using retroviral mediated gene transfer. Within five days of transplantation into muscle of mature mice, primary myoblasts had fused with host muscle cells to form hybrid myofibers. To examine the immunobiology of primary myoblasts, we compared transplanted cells in syngeneic and allogeneic hosts. Even without immune suppression, the hybrid fibers persisted with continued beta-gal expression up to six months after myoblast transplantation in syngeneic hosts. In allogeneic hosts, the implanted cells were completely eliminated within three weeks. To assess tumorigenicity, primary myoblasts and myoblasts from the C2 myogenic cell line were transplanted into immunodeficient mice. Only C2 myoblasts formed tumors. The ease of isolation, growth, and transfection of primary mouse myoblasts under the conditions described here expand the opportunities to study muscle cell growth and differentiation using myoblasts from normal as well as mutant strains of mice. The properties of these cells after transplantation--the stability of resulting hybrid myofibers without immune suppression, the persistence of transgene expression, and the lack of tumorigenicity--suggest that studies of cell-mediated gene therapy using primary myoblasts can now be broadly applied to mouse models of human muscle and non-muscle diseases.
将培养的成肌细胞移植到成熟骨骼肌中是一种针对肌肉和非肌肉疾病的新型治疗方法——成肌细胞介导的基因治疗的基础。成肌细胞移植用于纠正内在肌肉缺陷的成功取决于植入细胞与宿主肌纤维的融合。先前在小鼠身上进行的研究存在问题,因为这些研究涉及已建立的成肌细胞系或原代肌肉培养物的移植。这两种细胞群体都有缺点:成肌细胞系具有致瘤性,原代培养物中含有相当比例的非成肌细胞,这些细胞不会与宿主纤维融合。此外,对于这两种细胞群体,都需要对宿主进行免疫抑制才能长期保留移植细胞。为了克服这些困难,我们开发了新的培养条件,允许从原代培养物中纯化小鼠成肌细胞。在细胞增殖和分化测定中对原代成肌细胞的富集群体和克隆群体进行了表征。原代成肌细胞的生长依赖于添加的碱性成纤维细胞生长因子(bFGF),并且即使在经过30次群体倍增后仍保留分化能力。通过使用逆转录病毒介导的基因转移用标记酶β-半乳糖苷酶(β-gal)标记细胞,监测移植后纯化成肌细胞群体的命运。在移植到成熟小鼠肌肉后的五天内,原代成肌细胞已与宿主肌肉细胞融合形成杂种肌纤维。为了研究原代成肌细胞的免疫生物学,我们比较了同基因和异基因宿主中的移植细胞。即使没有免疫抑制,在同基因宿主中成肌细胞移植后,杂种纤维仍持续存在并持续β-gal表达长达六个月。在异基因宿主中,植入的细胞在三周内被完全清除。为了评估致瘤性,将原代成肌细胞和来自C2成肌细胞系的成肌细胞移植到免疫缺陷小鼠中。只有C2成肌细胞形成肿瘤。在此处所述条件下,原代小鼠成肌细胞易于分离、生长和转染,这扩大了使用正常小鼠以及突变小鼠品系的成肌细胞研究肌肉细胞生长和分化的机会。这些细胞移植后的特性——产生的杂种肌纤维在没有免疫抑制的情况下的稳定性、转基因表达的持续性以及缺乏致瘤性——表明使用原代成肌细胞进行细胞介导的基因治疗研究现在可以广泛应用于人类肌肉和非肌肉疾病的小鼠模型。