The role of CD8 T cells in controlling Mycobacterium tuberculosis infections in mice was confirmed by comparing the levels of growth of the organism in control, major histocompatibility complex class II knockout, and athymic mice and by transferring T-cell populations into athymic mice. By using donor mice which were incapable of making gamma interferon (IFN-γ), it was shown that IFN-γ production was essential for CD8 cell mediation of protective immunity against M. tuberculosis.
Excipients, considered “inactive
ingredients,” are a major component of formulated
drugs and play key roles in their
pharmacokinetics. Despite their pervasiveness,
whether they are active on any targets has not
been systematically explored. We computed the
likelihood that approved excipients would bind to
molecular targets. Testing in vitro revealed 25
excipient activities, ranging from low-nanomolar
to high-micromolar concentration. Another 109
activities were identified by testing against
clinical safety targets. In cellular models, five
excipients had fingerprints predictive of
system-level toxicity. Exposures of seven
excipients were investigated, and in certain
populations, two of these may reach levels of in
vitro target potency, including brain and gut
exposure of thimerosal and its major metabolite,
which had dopamine D3 receptor dissociation
constant
Kd
values of 320 and 210 nM, respectively. Although
most excipients deserve their status as inert,
many approved excipients may directly modulate
physiologically relevant targets.
Cationic liposomes enhanced the rate of transduction of target cells with retroviral vectors. The greatest effect was seen with the formulation DC-Chol/DOPE, which gave a 20-fold increase in initial transduction rate. This allowed an efficiency of transduction after brief exposure of target cells to virus plus liposome that could be achieved only after extensive exposure to virus alone. Enhancement with DC-Chol/DOPE was optimal when stable virion-liposome complexes were preformed. The transduction rate for complexed virus, as for virus used alone or with the polycation Polybrene, showed first-order dependence on virus concentration. Cationic liposomes, but not Polybrene, were able to mediate envelope-independent transduction, but optimal efficiency required envelope-receptor interaction. When virus complexed with DC-Chol/DOPE was used to transduce human mesothelioma xenografts, transduction was enhanced four- to fivefold compared to that for virus alone. Since the efficacy of gene therapy is dependent on the number of cells modified, which is in turn dependent upon the balance between transduction and biological clearance of the vector, the ability of cationic liposomes to form stable complexes with retroviral vectors and enhance their rate of infection is likely to be important for in vivo application.
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