Title of article
Skeletal muscle as an artificial endocrine tissue
Author/Authors
Geoffrey Goldspink، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
12
From page
211
To page
222
Abstract
Muscle has the ability to take up and express engineered genes and, because it is a post-mitotic tissue, their half-life of expression is prolonged. Although muscle is not regarded as a secretory tissue, in many cases, the gene products enter the systemic circulation. The possibility exists, therefore, of using this approach to alter levels of endocrine and paracrine factors. As a therapeutic procedure, this method has an advantage over the administration of the peptide/protein, which has a relatively short half-life and requires repeated injections. Engineered genes in plasmid or viral vectors under the control of a muscle-specific regulatory sequence may be introduced by intramuscular injection or by the introduction of transfected myoblasts. The latter is also being used in bioreactors to produce medicinal proteins/peptides in vitro as these offer some advantages over bacterial expression systems. However, for gene therapy purposes, there are still safety issues to be addressed.
Keywords
hormones , growth factors , Paracrine , Gene transfer , muscle-specific expression
Journal title
Best Practice and Research Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Best Practice and Research Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism
Record number
465898
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