INVESTIGADORES
HEREÑU Claudia Beatriz
artículos
Título:
Thymus and aging: potential of gene therapy for restoration of endocrine thymic function in thymus-deficient animal models.
Autor/es:
GOYA RG,; CÓNSOLE GM,; HEREÑÚ CB,; BROWN OA,; RIMOLDI OJ
Revista:
GERONTOLOGY
Editorial:
Karger
Referencias:
Lugar: Basel; Año: 2002 vol. 48 p. 325 - 328
ISSN:
0304-324X
Resumen:
Abstract Objective and Background: The aim of the present articleis to discuss the potential of gene therapy for thymic hormones as a novel therapeutic strategy to treat dyshomeostatic states associated with athymia, as Di George syndrome, or hypothymic conditions like those associated with AIDS, chronic stress or aging. First we review the advantages of the athymic (nude) mouse as an animal model to implement experimental thymic hormone gene therapy strategies to restore endocrine thymic function. The aging rat, known to be markedly hypothymic, is also considered as an alternative model. Methods and ExpectedResults: The possibility of constructing adenoviral vectors harboring a synthetic gene for the thymic hormone thymulin is discussed. The adenoviral vector so constructed would then be injected intramuscularly in nude mice or senile rats. Transduced myocytes should then begin to act as an ectopic source of thymulin thus restoring circulating thymulin levels to normal youthful levels. Conclusion: We conclude that the implementation of thymulin gene therapy should provide novel biotechnological tools that will boost basic studies on the molecular biology of thymulin and would also allow an assessment of the potential of gene therapy to restore circulating thymulin levels in thymodeficient animal models. Copyright © 2002 S. Karger AG, Basel