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Circulation
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Published Online
on April 14, 2008

Circulation. 2008
Published online before print April 14, 2008, doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.746412
A more recent version of this article appeared on April 22, 2008
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*Genes and Gene Therapy
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Right arrow Restenosis
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Right arrow Catheter-based coronary interventions: stents
Right arrow Endothelium/vascular type/nitric oxide

Submitted on October 16, 2007
Accepted on February 27, 2008

Local Delivery of Gene Vectors From Bare-Metal Stents by Use of a Biodegradable Synthetic Complex Inhibits In-Stent Restenosis in Rat Carotid Arteries

Ilia Fishbein MD, PhD, Ivan Alferiev PhD, Marina Bakay PhD, Stanley J. Stachelek PhD, Peter Sobolewski PhD, Meizan Lai MD, Hoon Choi PhD, I.-W. Chen PhD, and Robert J. Levy MD*

From the Division of Cardiology (I.F., I.A., M.B., S.J.S., P.S., M.L., R.J.L.), The Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pa; and the Department of Materials (H.C., I.-W.C.), The School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, The University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pa.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: levyr{at}email.chop.edu.

Background—Local drug delivery from polymer-coated stents has demonstrated efficacy for preventing in-stent restenosis; however, both the inflammatory effects of polymer coatings and concerns about late outcomes of drug-eluting stent use indicate the need to investigate innovative approaches, such as combining localized gene therapy with stent angioplasty. Thus, we investigated the hypothesis that adenoviral vectors (Ad) could be delivered from the bare-metal surfaces of stents with a synthetic complex for reversible vector binding.

Methods and Results—We synthesized the 3 components of a gene vector binding complex: (1) A polyallylamine bisphosphonate with latent thiol groups (PABT), (2) a polyethyleneimine (PEI) with pyridyldithio groups for amplification of attachment sites [PEI(PDT)], and (3) a bifunctional (amine- and thiol-reactive) cross-linker with a labile ester bond (HL). HL-modified Ad attached to PABT/PEI(PDT)-treated steel surfaces demonstrated both sustained release in vitro over 30 days and localized green fluorescent protein expression in rat arterial smooth muscle cell cultures, which were not sensitive to either inhibition by neutralizing anti-Ad antibodies or inactivation after storage at 37°C. In rat carotid studies, deployment of steel stents configured with PABT/PEI(PDT)/HL-tethered adenoviral vectors demonstrated both site-specific arterial AdGFP expression and adenovirus-luciferase transgene activity per optical imaging. Rat carotid stent delivery of adenovirus encoding inducible nitric oxide synthase resulted in significant inhibition of restenosis.

Conclusions—Reversible immobilization of adenovirus vectors on the bare-metal surfaces of endovascular stents via a synthetic complex represents an efficient, tunable method for sustained release of gene vectors to the vasculature.


Key words: restenosis • stents • gene therapy