IBYME   02675
INSTITUTO DE BIOLOGIA Y MEDICINA EXPERIMENTAL
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Restorative effect of insulin-like growth factor-I gene therapy in the hypothalamus of senile rats with dopaminergic dysfunction
Autor/es:
HERENU CB; CRISTINA C; RIMOLDI OJ; BECU-VILLALOBOS D; CAMBIAGGI,V.; PORTIANSKY,E.L.; GOYA,R.G.
Revista:
GENE THERAPY
Editorial:
Nature Publishing Group
Referencias:
Año: 2007 vol. 14 p. 237 - 245
ISSN:
0969-7128
Resumen:
Insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) is emerging as a powerful neuroprotective molecule that is strongly induced in the central nervous system after different insults. We constructed a recombinant adenoviral vector (RAd-IGFI) harboring the gene for rat IGF-I and used it to implement IGF-I gene therapy in the hypothalamus of senile female rats, which display hypothalamic dopaminergic (DA) neurodegeneration and as a consequence, chronic hyperprolactinemia. Restorative IGF-I gene therapy was implemented in young (5 months) and senile (28 months) female rats, which received a single intrahypothalamic injection of 3 x 10(9) plaque-forming units of RAd-betagal (a control adenoviral vector expressing beta-galactosidase) or RAd-IGFI and were killed 17 days post-injection. In the young animals, neither vector modified serum prolactin levels, but in the RAd-IGFI-injected senile rats a nearly full reversion of their hyperprolactinemic status was recorded. Morphometric analysis revealed a significant increase in the total number of tyrosine hydroxylase-positive cells in the hypothalamus of experimental as compared with control senile animals (5874+/-486 and 3390+/-498, respectively). Our results indicate that IGF-I gene therapy in senile female rats is highly effective for restoring their hypothalamic DA dysfunction and thus reversing their chronic hyperprolactinemia.