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Dive into the research topics where A D Miller is active.

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Featured researches published by A D Miller.


Methods in Enzymology | 1993

Use of retroviral vectors for gene transfer and expression.

A D Miller; Daniel G. Miller; J. V. Garcia; C. M. Lynch

Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the use of retroviral vectors for gene transfer and expression. Retroviruses have evolved a highly efficient gene transfer capability that provides the basis for one of the most effective gene transfer systems available to date. The retroviral vector system has proved useful for the transfer of genes into many cell types, such as hematopoietic cells and other primary cells that are difficult to transduce by using other methods. Most attempts to make virus from a particular vector have been straightforward, resulting in high-titer virus carrying the unrearranged vector. In some cases, it has proved difficult to generate high-titer virus from vectors carrying specific genes or cDNAs. However, the presence of the intron in reverse orientation resulted in aberrant vector transcription and low vector titers. Some reports suggest that the titer of retroviral vectors can be dramatically increased by the cocultivation of a vector-producing cell line with a packaging cell line having a different host range. However, no more than a 2- to 10-fold increase has been found in titer by using this method, with the disadvantages of increased probability of helper virus generation and vector rearrangement.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1990

Overexpression of the human insulinlike growth factor I receptor promotes ligand-dependent neoplastic transformation.

M Kaleko; W J Rutter; A D Miller

The human insulinlike growth factor I receptor was overexpressed in NIH 3T3 cells as well as human and rat primary fibroblast strains. The NIH 3T3 cells displayed a ligand-dependent, highly transformed phenotype. When exposed to insulinlike growth factor I or supraphysiologic levels of insulin, NIH 3T3 cells that expressed high levels of receptors formed aggregates in tissue culture dishes, colonies in soft agar, and tumors in nude mice. Expression of 1 million receptors per cell, a 40-fold increase above the base-line level, was required for anchorage-independent growth. Primary fibroblasts that expressed high levels of receptors displayed a ligand-dependent change in morphology and an increase in saturation density but did not acquire a fully transformed phenotype. The results demonstrate that when amplified, this ubiquitous growth factor receptor behaves like an oncogenic protein and is capable of promoting neoplastic growth in vivo.


Molecular and Cellular Biology | 1989

A majority of mice show long-term expression of a human beta-globin gene after retrovirus transfer into hematopoietic stem cells.

M A Bender; Richard Gelinas; A D Miller

Murine bone marrow was infected with a high-titer retrovirus vector containing the human beta-globin and neomycin phosphotransferase genes. Anemic W/Wv mice were transplanted with infected marrow which in some cases had been exposed to the selective agent G418. Human beta-globin expression was monitored in transplanted animals by using a monoclonal antibody specific for human beta-globin polypeptide, and hematopoietic reconstitution was monitored by using donor and recipient mice which differed in hemoglobin type. In some experiments all transplanted mice expressed the human beta-globin polypeptide for over 4 months, and up to 50% of peripheral erythrocytes contained detectable levels of polypeptide. DNA analysis of transplanted animals revealed that virtually every myeloid cell contained a provirus. Integration site analysis and reconstitution of secondary marrow recipients suggested that every mouse was reconstituted with at least one infected stem cell which had extensive repopulation capability. The ability to consistently transfer an active beta-globin gene into mouse hematopoietic cells improves the feasibility of using these techniques for somatic cell gene therapy in humans.


Journal of Virology | 2000

Retrovirus Vectors Bearing Jaagsiekte Sheep Retrovirus Env Transduce Human Cells by Using a New Receptor Localized to Chromosome 3p21.3

Sharath K. Rai; James C. DeMartini; A D Miller

ABSTRACT Jaagsiekte sheep retrovirus (JSRV) is a type D retrovirus associated with a contagious lung tumor of sheep, ovine pulmonary carcinoma. Other than sheep, JSRV is known to infect goats, but there is no evidence of human infection. Until now it has not been possible to study the host range for JSRV because of the inability to grow this virus in culture. Here we show that the JSRV envelope protein (Env) can be used to pseudotype Moloney murine leukemia virus (MoMLV)-based retrovirus vectors and that such vectors can transduce human cells in culture. We constructed hybrid retrovirus packaging cells that express the JSRV Env and the MoMLV Gag-Pol proteins and can produce JSRV-pseudotype vectors at titers of up to 106 alkaline phosphatase-positive focus-forming units/ml. Using this high-titer virus, we have studied the host range for JSRV, which includes sheep, human, monkey, bovine, dog, and rabbit cells but not mouse, rat, or hamster cells. Considering the inability of the JSRV-pseudotype vector to transduce hamster cells, we used the hamster cell line-based Stanford G3 panel of whole human genome radiation hybrids to phenotypically map the JSRV receptor (JVR) gene within the p21.3 region of human chromosome 3. JVR is likely a new retrovirus receptor, as none of the previously identified retrovirus receptors localizes to the same position. Several chemokine receptors that have been shown to serve as coreceptors for lentivirus infection are clustered in the same region of chromosome 3; however, careful examination shows that the JSRV receptor does not colocalize with any of these genes.


Journal of Virology | 2012

Xpr1 Is an Atypical G-Protein-Coupled Receptor That Mediates Xenotropic and Polytropic Murine Retrovirus Neurotoxicity

Andrew E. Vaughan; Ramon Mendoza; R. Aranda; Jean-Luc Battini; A D Miller

ABSTRACT Xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus (XMRV) was first identified in human prostate cancer tissue and was later found in a high percentage of humans with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). While exploring potential disease mechanisms, we found that XMRV infection induced apoptosis in SY5Y human neuroblastoma cells, suggesting a mechanism for the neuromuscular pathology seen in CFS. Several lines of evidence show that the cell entry receptor for XMRV, Xpr1, mediates this effect, and chemical cross-linking studies show that Xpr1 is associated with the Gβ subunit of the G-protein heterotrimer. The activation of adenylate cyclase rescued the cells from XMRV toxicity, indicating that toxicity resulted from reduced G-protein-mediated cyclic AMP (cAMP) signaling. Some proteins with similarity to Xpr1 are involved in phosphate uptake into cells, but we found no role of Xpr1 in phosphate uptake or its regulation. Our results indicate that Xpr1 is a novel, atypical G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) and that xenotropic or polytropic retrovirus binding can disrupt the cAMP-mediated signaling function of Xpr1, leading to the apoptosis of infected cells. We show that this pathway is also responsible for the classic toxicity of the polytropic mink cell focus-forming (MCF) retrovirus in mink cells. Although it now seems clear that the detection of XMRV in humans was the result of sample contamination with a recombinant mouse virus, our findings may have relevance to neurologic disease induced by MCF retroviruses in mice.


Journal of Virology | 2001

Jaagsiekte Sheep Retrovirus Env Protein Stabilizes Retrovirus Vectors against Inactivation by Lung Surfactant, Centrifugation, and Freeze-Thaw Cycling

David A. Coil; J. H. Strickler; Sharath K. Rai; A D Miller

ABSTRACT Jaagsiekte sheep retrovirus (JSRV) replicates in the lungs of sheep and causes the secretion of copious lung fluid containing the virus. Adaptation of JSRV to infection and replication in the lung and its apparent resistance to the denaturing activity of lung fluid suggest that vectors based on JSRV would be useful for gene therapy targeted to the lung. We show here that a retrovirus vector bearing the JSRV Env is stable during treatment with lung surfactant while an otherwise identical vector bearing an amphotropic Env is inactivated. Furthermore, the JSRV vector was stable during centrifugation, allowing facile vector concentration, and showed no loss of activity after six freeze-thaw cycles. However, the JSRV vector was inactivated by standard disinfectants, indicating that JSRV vectors pose no unusual safety risk related to their improved stability under other conditions.


Journal of Virology | 2011

The Left Half of the XMRV Retrovirus Is Present in an Endogenous Retrovirus of NIH/3T3 Swiss Mouse Cells

Ramon Mendoza; Andrew E. Vaughan; A D Miller

ABSTRACT Xenotropic murine leukemia virus-related virus (XMRV) is a gammaretrovirus found in association with human prostate cancer and chronic fatigue syndrome, although these associations are controversial. XMRV shows at most 94% identity to known mouse retroviruses. Here we used XMRV-specific PCR to search for a more closely related source of XMRV in mice. While we could not find a complete copy, we did find a 3,600-bp region of XMRV in an endogenous retrovirus present in NIH/3T3 cells. These results show that XMRV has clear ancestors in mice and highlight another possible source of contamination in PCR assays for XMRV.


Journal of Virology | 2001

Many Nonmammalian Cells Exhibit Postentry Blocks to Transduction by Gammaretroviruses Pseudotyped with Various Viral Envelopes, Including Vesicular Stomatitis Virus G Glycoprotein

Clarissa Dirks; A D Miller

ABSTRACT Previous studies have suggested that Moloney murine leukemia virus (MoMLV)-based vectors pseudotyped with the vesicular stomatitis virus G glycoprotein (VSV-G) have extensive ability to transduce nonmammalian cells. However, we have identified multiple cell lines from fish (FHM), mosquitoes (Mos-55), moths (Sf9 and High-5), flies (S2), and frogs (XPK2) that are not efficiently transduced by MoMLV-based vectors pseudotyped with many different viral envelope proteins, including VSV-G, while the same vectors are functional in these cells following transfection. A comparison of MoMLV-based vector transduction in mammalian and nonmammalian cells shows that the nonmammalian cells exhibit blocks at either entry, reverse transcription, or integration. Additionally, VSV-G-pseudotyped MoMLV-based vector transduction is attenuated in the zebrafish cell line ZF4 at entry and/or reverse transcription, whereas other transduction processes are unaffected. We show that the variation of transduction by MoMLV-based vectors in mammalian and nonmammalian cells is not due to differences in culture conditions or cell division rate but is likely the result of divergence in cellular factors required for retroviral transduction.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1989

Activation of muscle-specific genes in pigment, nerve, fat, liver, and fibroblast cell lines by forced expression of MyoD

Harold Weintraub; Stephen J. Tapscott; Robert L. Davis; Mathew J. Thayer; M. A. Adam; Andrew B. Lassar; A D Miller


Journal of Virology | 1991

Construction and properties of retrovirus packaging cells based on gibbon ape leukemia virus.

A D Miller; J V Garcia; N von Suhr; C M Lynch; C Wilson; Maribeth V. Eiden

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M A Bender

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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R E Gelinas

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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W. R. A. Osborne

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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C. M. Lynch

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Greg Wolgamot

University of Washington

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J. E. J. Rasko

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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R. A. Hock

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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