Journal of Southern Medical University ›› 2006, Vol. 26 ›› Issue (10): 1417-1420.

Previous Articles     Next Articles

Recombinant adenovirus-mediated human cytosolic glutathione peroxidase gene transfection protects vascular endothelial cells from oxidative damage

XIANG He-li, XUE Wu-jun, HOU Jun, TIAN Pu-xun, TENG Yan, PAN Xiao-ming, DING Xiao-ming, FENG Xin-shun Department of Kidney Transplantation, First Affiliated Hospital, Medical College of Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an 710061, China   

  1. 西安交通大学医学院第一附属医院肾移植科; 西安交通大学医学院第一附属医院肾移植科 陕西西安; 710061; 陕西西安;
  • Online:2006-10-20 Published:2006-10-20

Abstract: Objective To study the protective effect of recombinant adenovirus-mediated human cytosolic glutathione peroxidase (hCGPx) gene transfection on vascular endothelial cells ECV304 from oxidative damage. Methods pGEM-T Easy Vector containing hCGPx cDNA and recombinant adenovirus shuttle plasmid pACCMV-pLpA were used to construct the shuttle plasmid pACCMV-hCGPx for cotransfection of 293 cells with pJM17, thereby to obtain the recombinant adenovirus AdCMV-hCGPx. Cultured ECV304 cells were transfected with AdCMV-hCGPx for 24, 48 and 72 h, respectively, with the cells transfected with the empty vector serving as control, and hCGPx gene expression was then examined in the transfected cells. The transfected cell viability and apoptotic cell ratio were evaluated after treatment of the cells with H2O2. Results The expression ratio of hCGPx gene was significantly higher in the AdCMV-hCGPx-transfected cells than in those with empty vector transfection (P<0.01). The hCGPx gene-transfected cells showed significantly higher viability and significantly lower apoptotic ratio than the control cells following challenge with H2O2-induced oxidative damage. Conclusion hCGPx gene transfer mediated by recombinant adenovirus protects the vascular endothelial cells from oxidative damage in vitro, possibly due to the antioxidative and apoptosis-inhibiting effect of hCGPx.

CLC Number: