Artificial self-assembling systems for gene delivery
著者
書誌事項
Artificial self-assembling systems for gene delivery
(Conference proceedings series)
American Chemical Society, c1996
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注記
"Developed from two conferences sponsored by Cambridge Healthtech Institute, September 28-29, 1995, in Wakefield, Massachusetts, and October 10-11, 1995, in Washington, D.C."
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Discusses recent advances in artificial self-assembling systems, including retrotransposon vectors, hairpin ribozymes, triple-helix-forming oligonucleotides, liposome-mediated transfection, and photonic nanostructures. Addresses developing efficient synthetic vectors such as modular self-assembling systems mimicking important features of viral vectors. Presents new developments in synthetic self-assembling gene delivery systems, including innovations in nonviral
systems, targeting nucleic acids, ligand-polylysine mediated transfer, dendrimer-mediated transfection, cationic liposomes, and polylysine DNA complexes.
目次
- Synthetic Retrotransposon Vectors and Gene Targeting
- A New Retroviral Vector and a New Method To Target Homologous Recombination in Mammalian Cells
- Development of the Hairpin Ribozyme as a Gene Therapy Approach to Human Immunodeficiency Virus Type-1 Infection
- Replicating Plasmid Vectors for Cancer Gene Therapy
- Gene Targeting Using Triple-Helix-Forming Oligonucleotides
- Effects of Lipololysaccahrides on Liposome-Mediated Transfection and the Consequence for DNA Preparation for Gene Therapy
- The Application of Electronic Pulse Delivery in Gene Therapy: Progress and Perspectives
- Self-Assembling DNA Photonic Nanostructures
- Controllable Gene Therapy Using Nonviral Systems
- Progress in Targeting Nucleic Acids to the Liver
- Advances in Receptor-Mediated Gene Transfer into Cells In Vitro and In Vivo
- Ligand-Polylysine Mediated Gene Transfer
- Efficient Transfer of Genetic Material into Mammalian Cells Using Polyamidoamine Dendrimers as Synthetic Vectors: Dendrimer-Mediated Transfection
- The Proton Sponge: A Trick the Viruses Did Not Exploit
- Biomaterials for Gene Transfer: Self-Assembling Nanostructured Aquasomes
- Gene Transfer by Liposome-Entrapped Polycation-Condensed DNA: LPDI and LPDII
- Gene Transfer into Mammalian Cells Using Synthetic Cationic Lipids
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