Skip to Content

Dear Customer:

The current international situation is complex and volatile, and uncertain tariff policies may potentially impact our product prices. Given these uncertainties, we value your understanding regarding order-related matters.

If you decide to place an order during this period, we reserve the right to adjust the price based on the evolving situation. We understand that market changes may cause inconvenience. We will negotiate with you if there’s a significant price fluctuation due to tariff policy changes before the order’s actual delivery, and in such cases we may adjust or cancel the order as necessary.

We are planning system maintenance between Friday, Apr 18 at 9:00 PM CDT and Saturday, Apr 19 at 9:00 AM CDT. This will impact both web and offline transactions, including online orders, quotes, price and availability checks, and order status inquiries. We apologize for any inconvenience.

For important updates on recent policy changes, please click here for more details.

Merck
CN
  • Adeno-associated virus-mediated rescue of neonatal lethality in argininosuccinate synthetase-deficient mice.

Adeno-associated virus-mediated rescue of neonatal lethality in argininosuccinate synthetase-deficient mice.

Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy (2013-07-03)
Cindy Y Kok, Sharon C Cunningham, Kevin H Carpenter, Allison P Dane, Susan M Siew, Grant J Logan, Philip W Kuchel, Ian E Alexander
ABSTRACT

Viral vectors based on adeno-associated virus (AAV) are showing exciting promise in gene therapy trials targeting the adult liver. A major challenge in extending this promise to the pediatric liver is the loss of episomal vector genomes that accompanies hepatocellular proliferation during liver growth. Hence maintenance of sufficient transgene expression will be critical for success in infants and children. We therefore set out to explore the therapeutic efficacy and durability of liver-targeted gene transfer in the challenging context of a neonatal lethal urea cycle defect, using the argininosuccinate synthetase deficient mouse. Lethal neonatal hyperammonemia was prevented by prenatal and early postnatal vector delivery; however, hyperammonemia subsequently recurred limiting survival to no more than 33 days despite vector readministration. Antivector antibodies acquired in milk from vector-exposed dams were subsequently shown to be blocking vector readministration, and were avoided by crossfostering vector-treated pups to vector-naive dams. In the absence of passively acquired antivector antibodies, vector redelivery proved efficacious with mice surviving to adulthood without recurrence of significant hyperammonemia. These data demonstrate the potential of AAV vectors in the developing liver, showing that vector readministration can be used to counter growth-associated loss of transgene expression provided the challenge of antivector humoral immunity is addressed.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Extract-N-Amp Tissue PCR Kit, sufficient for 1000 extractions, sufficient for 1000 amplifications
Sign Into View Organizational & Contract Pricing
SKUPack SizeAvailabilityPriceQuantity
10 g
Please contact Customer Service for Availability
CN¥4,208.28