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Microtubule Acetylation Through HDAC6 Inhibition Results in Increased Transfection Efficiency
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Microtubule Acetylation Through HDAC6 Inhibition Results in Increased Transfection Efficiency

Erin E Vaughan, R. Christopher Geiger, Aaron M Miller, Phoebe L Loh-Marley, Takayoshi Suzuki, Naoki Miyata and David A Dean
Molecular therapy, Vol.16(11), pp.1841-1847
11-01-2008
PMID: 18781140

Abstract

Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology Genetics & Heredity Life Sciences & Biomedicine Medicine, Research & Experimental Research & Experimental Medicine Science & Technology
The success of viral and nonviral gene delivery relies on the ability of DNA-based vectors to traverse the cytoplasm and reach the nucleus. We, as well as other researchers, have shown that plasmids utilize the microtubule network and its associated motor proteins to traffic toward the nucleus. While disruption of microtubules with nocodazole was shown to greatly inhibit cytoplasmic plasmid trafficking, it did not abolish it. It has been demonstrated that a pool of stabilized post-translationally acetylated microtubules exists in cells, and that this acetylation may play a role in protein trafficking. In order to determine whether this modification could account for the residual DNA trafficking in nocodazole-treated cells, we inhibited or knocked down the levels of the tubulin deacetylase, histone deacetylase 6 (HDAC6), thereby generating higher levels of acetylated microtubules. Electroporation of plasmids into cells with inhibited or silenced HDAC6 resulted in increased gene transfer. This increased transfection efficiency was not because of increased transcriptional activity, but rather, because of increased cytoplasmic trafficking. When plasmids were cytoplasmically microinjected into HDAC6-deficient cells, they entered the nucleus within 5 minutes of injection, almost 10 times faster than in wild-type cells. Taken together, these results suggest that modulation of HDAC6 and the microtubule network can increase the efficiency of gene transfer.
url
https://doi.org/10.1038/mt.2008.190View
Published (Version of record) Open

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