Immune deviation by mucosal antigen administration suppresses gene-transfer-induced inhibitor formation to factor IX

被引:34
作者
Cao, Ou
Armstrong, Elina
Schlachterman, Alexander
Wang, Lixin
Okita, David K.
Conti-Fine, Bianca
High, Katherine A.
Herzog, Roland W.
机构
[1] Univ Florida, Dept Pediat, Div Cellular & Mol Therapy, Alachua, FL 32615 USA
[2] Childrens Hosp Philadelphia, Dept Pediat, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[3] Univ Penn, Sch Med, Philadelphia, PA 19104 USA
[4] Univ Minnesota, Dept Biochem, Minneapolis, MN USA
[5] Howard Hughes Med Inst, Chevy Chase, MD USA
关键词
D O I
10.1182/blood-2005-11-4668
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Formation of inhibitory antibodies is a serious complication of protein or gene replacement therapy for hemophilias, congenital X-linked bleeding disorders. In hemophilia B (coagulation factor IX [F.IX] deficiency), lack of endogenous F.IX antigen expression and other genetic factors may increase the risk of antibody formation to functional F.IX. Here, we developed a protocol for reducing inhibitor formation in gene therapy by prior mucosal (intranasal) administration of a peptide representing a human F.IX-specific CD4(+) T-cell epitope in hemophilia B mice. C3H/HeJ mice with a F.IX gene deletion produced inhibitory IgG to human F.IX after hepatic gene transfer with an adeno-associated viral vector. These animals subsequently lost systemic F.IX expression. In contrast, repeated intranasal administration of the specific peptide resulted in reduced inhibitor formation, sustained circulating F.IX levels, and sustained partial correction of coagulation following hepatic gene transfer. This was achieved through immune deviation to a T-helper-cell response with increased IL-10 and TGF-beta production and activation of regulatory CD4(+)CD25(+) T cells.
引用
收藏
页码:480 / 486
页数:7
相关论文
共 44 条
[1]  
Alpan O, 2001, BLOOD, V98, p825A
[2]   Induction of antigen-specific CD4+T-cell anergy and deletion by in vivo viral gene transfer [J].
Dobrzynski, E ;
Mingozzi, F ;
Liu, YL ;
Bendo, E ;
Cao, O ;
Wang, LX ;
Herzog, RW .
BLOOD, 2004, 104 (04) :969-977
[3]   Tolerance Induction by Viral In Vivo Gene Transfer [J].
Dobrzynski, Eric ;
Herzog, Roland W. .
CLINICAL MEDICINE & RESEARCH, 2005, 3 (04) :234-240
[4]   Oral tolerance [J].
Faria, AMC ;
Weiner, HL .
IMMUNOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 2005, 206 :232-259
[5]   Role of vector in activation of T cell subsets in immune responses against the secreted transgene product factor IX [J].
Fields, PA ;
Kowalczyk, DW ;
Arruda, VR ;
Armstrong, E ;
McCleland, ML ;
Hagstrom, JN ;
Pasi, KJ ;
Ertl, HCJ ;
Herzog, RW ;
High, KA .
MOLECULAR THERAPY, 2000, 1 (03) :225-235
[6]   Risk and prevention of anti-factor IX formation in AAV-mediated gene transfer in the context of a large deletion of F9 [J].
Fields, PA ;
Arruda, VR ;
Armstrong, E ;
Chu, K ;
Mingozzi, F ;
Hagstrom, JN ;
Herzog, RW ;
High, KA .
MOLECULAR THERAPY, 2001, 4 (03) :201-210
[7]  
GIANELLI F, 1996, CLIN HAEMATOLOGY HAE, V9, P211
[8]   Systemic overexpression of IL-10 induces CD4+CD25+ cell populations in vivo and ameliorates type 1 diabetes in nonobese diabetic mice in a dose-dependent fashion [J].
Goudy, KS ;
Burkhardt, BR ;
Wasserfall, C ;
Song, SH ;
Campbell-Thompson, ML ;
Brusko, T ;
Powers, MA ;
Clare-Salzler, MJ ;
Sobel, ES ;
Ellis, TM ;
Flotte, TR ;
Atkinson, MA .
JOURNAL OF IMMUNOLOGY, 2003, 171 (05) :2270-2278
[9]   Identification of T-cell epitopes in clotting factor IX and lack of tolerance in inbred mice [J].
Greenwood, R ;
Wang, B ;
Midkiff, K ;
White, GC ;
Lin, HF ;
Frelinger, JA .
JOURNAL OF THROMBOSIS AND HAEMOSTASIS, 2003, 1 (01) :95-102
[10]   Immune implications of gene therapy for hemophilia [J].
Herzog, RW ;
Dobrzynski, E .
SEMINARS IN THROMBOSIS AND HEMOSTASIS, 2004, 30 (02) :215-226