Cellular microvesicle pathways can be targeted to transfer genetic information between non-immune cells.

Eukaryotic cell communication is based on protein signaling cascades that require direct cell-cell apposition, or receptor engagement by secreted molecules. The transmission of genetic information is thought to be uncommon, apart from recent reports of exosomal RNA transfer in immune and glioblastom...

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Main Authors: Amy M Skinner, S Lee O'Neill, Peter Kurre
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2009-07-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2704871?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-7e4d534834a54f689c89278f2a7995c12020-11-24T21:36:43ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032009-07-0147e621910.1371/journal.pone.0006219Cellular microvesicle pathways can be targeted to transfer genetic information between non-immune cells.Amy M SkinnerS Lee O'NeillPeter KurreEukaryotic cell communication is based on protein signaling cascades that require direct cell-cell apposition, or receptor engagement by secreted molecules. The transmission of genetic information is thought to be uncommon, apart from recent reports of exosomal RNA transfer in immune and glioblastoma cells. We wished to examine if existing microvesicle pathways could be directly targeted for the horizontal transfer of RNA genomes in less specialized cell types. Using replication-deficient retrovirus vector, studies herein confirm that a range of cells routinely sequester a small population of these RNA genomes in a non-canonical compartment, refractory to antibody neutralization and unaffected by specific pharmacological inhibition of pathways involved in conventional viral trafficking. Our experiments further reveal the cytoplasmic colocalization of vector genomes with tetraspanin proteins as well as the PI-3-kinase sensitive trafficking and subsequent transmission to 2 degrees targets. Collectively, our results indicate a scalable process whereby cells route vector genomes to multivesicular bodies (MVB) for cytoplasmic trafficking and exosomal release. Our findings imply that cells can serve to deliver recombinant payload, targeted for the stable genetic modification of 2 degrees target cells.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2704871?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amy M Skinner
S Lee O'Neill
Peter Kurre
spellingShingle Amy M Skinner
S Lee O'Neill
Peter Kurre
Cellular microvesicle pathways can be targeted to transfer genetic information between non-immune cells.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Amy M Skinner
S Lee O'Neill
Peter Kurre
author_sort Amy M Skinner
title Cellular microvesicle pathways can be targeted to transfer genetic information between non-immune cells.
title_short Cellular microvesicle pathways can be targeted to transfer genetic information between non-immune cells.
title_full Cellular microvesicle pathways can be targeted to transfer genetic information between non-immune cells.
title_fullStr Cellular microvesicle pathways can be targeted to transfer genetic information between non-immune cells.
title_full_unstemmed Cellular microvesicle pathways can be targeted to transfer genetic information between non-immune cells.
title_sort cellular microvesicle pathways can be targeted to transfer genetic information between non-immune cells.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2009-07-01
description Eukaryotic cell communication is based on protein signaling cascades that require direct cell-cell apposition, or receptor engagement by secreted molecules. The transmission of genetic information is thought to be uncommon, apart from recent reports of exosomal RNA transfer in immune and glioblastoma cells. We wished to examine if existing microvesicle pathways could be directly targeted for the horizontal transfer of RNA genomes in less specialized cell types. Using replication-deficient retrovirus vector, studies herein confirm that a range of cells routinely sequester a small population of these RNA genomes in a non-canonical compartment, refractory to antibody neutralization and unaffected by specific pharmacological inhibition of pathways involved in conventional viral trafficking. Our experiments further reveal the cytoplasmic colocalization of vector genomes with tetraspanin proteins as well as the PI-3-kinase sensitive trafficking and subsequent transmission to 2 degrees targets. Collectively, our results indicate a scalable process whereby cells route vector genomes to multivesicular bodies (MVB) for cytoplasmic trafficking and exosomal release. Our findings imply that cells can serve to deliver recombinant payload, targeted for the stable genetic modification of 2 degrees target cells.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2704871?pdf=render
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