Pre-existing AAV capsid-specific CD8+ T cells are unable to eliminate AAV-transduced hepatocytes
- PMID: 17245353
- DOI: 10.1038/sj.mt.6300090
Pre-existing AAV capsid-specific CD8+ T cells are unable to eliminate AAV-transduced hepatocytes
Abstract
The goal of these studies was to test whether adeno-associated virus (AAV) capsid-specific CD8(+) T cells cause loss of hepatic AAV-mediated gene expression in experimental animals. Mice immunized with adenoviral vectors expressing AAV capsid or with AAV vectors developed CD8(+) T cells in blood, lymphatic tissues, and liver to epitopes shared between AAV2 and AAV8, and serotype-specific neutralizing antibodies. At the height of the T cells' effector phase, mice were infused with a heterologous AAV vector expressing human factor IX under a hepatocyte-specific promoter. Despite the presence of lytic CD8(+) T cells in the liver, hepatic Factor IX expression was sustained and comparable in AAV-preimmune and naïve animals. These results suggest that, in mice, pre-existing CD8(+) T cells to AAV capsid do not affect the longevity of AAV-mediated hepatic gene transfer. These results are in contrast to the outcome of a recent gene therapy trial of hemophilia B patients who were treated by hepatic gene transfer of AAV2 vectors expressing Factor IX. The loss of Factor IX expression, accompanied by a rise in liver enzymes and detectable frequencies of circulating AAV capsid-specific T cells, suggested T-cell-mediated destruction of transduced hepatocytes following reactivation of AAV-specific T cells upon AAV transfer.
Comment in
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Immune responses to AAV capsid: are mice not humans after all?Mol Ther. 2007 Apr;15(4):649-50. doi: 10.1038/sj.mt.6300123. Mol Ther. 2007. PMID: 17372595 No abstract available.
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