Vector (biology)
Traditionally in
medicine, a
vector is an
organism that does not cause
disease itself but which spreads
infection by conveying
pathogens from one
host to another. Species of
mosquito, for example, serve as vectors for the deadly disease
Malaria. This sense of "biological vector" is the primary one in
epidemiology and in common speech.
In
gene therapy, a virus itself may serve as a vector, if it has been
re-engineered and is used to deliver a
gene to its target
cell. A "vector" in this sense is a vehicle for delivering genetic material such as
DNA to a cell.
Finally, in
genetics more generally, DNA by itself may be regarded as a vector, for example in particular when it is used for cell
transformation. A vector in this sense is a
DNA construct, such as a
plasmid or a
bacterial artificial chromosome, that contains an
origin of replication. An appropriate replication origin causes a cell to copy the construct along with the cell's
chromosomes and to pass it along to its progeny. A single cell that has been transformed with a vector will grow into an entire culture of cells, which all contain the vector, as well as any gene attached to it within the construct. Because the constructs can be extracted from the cells by
purification techniques, transformation with a vector is a way of making a small number of DNA molecules in to a much larger one.
There is a possibility for confusion between the use of "vector" in gene therapy and its use in molecular biology more generally. Some transformation technologies, such as
lipofectamine, enable the direct delivery of a DNA construct as therapy in a
tissue. In such a situation, a plasmid vector may be regarded as serving as its own gene-therapy vector. When a speaker calls it "a vector," they may be referring to either of its vector aspects or often both.
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mosquito (
malaria,
St. Louis encephalitis,
dengue fever)
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flea (
bubonic plague)
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tick (
Lyme disease,
rocky mountain spotted fever,
tick-borne encephalitis)
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adenovirus*
adeno-associated virus*
tobacco mosaic virus (plants)
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cytomegalovirus*
bacteriophage (
bacteria)
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viral vector*
SV40 (Simian virus 40)
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Plasmid*
Yeast artificial chromosome (
Chromosome walking,
Positional cloning)
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Bacterial artificial chromosome (
Shotgun sequencing)
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Vector DNA