Retroviral gene therapy with an immunoglobulin-antigen fusion construct protects from experimental autoimmune uveitis

被引:92
作者
Agarwal, RK
Kang, YB
Zambidis, E
Scott, DW
Chan, CC
Caspi, RR
机构
[1] NEI, Immunol Lab, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
[2] Amer Red Cross, Holland Lab, Dept Immunol, Rockville, MD USA
关键词
D O I
10.1172/JCI9168
中图分类号
R-3 [医学研究方法]; R3 [基础医学];
学科分类号
1001 ;
摘要
Immunoglobulins can serve as tolerogenic carriers for antigens, and B cells can function as tolerogenic antigen-presenting cells. We used this principle to design a strategy for gene therapy of experimental autoimmune uveitis, a cell-mediated autoimmune disease model for human uveitis induced with the uveitogenic interphotoreceptor retinoid-binding protein (IRBP). A retroviral vector was constructed containing a major uveitogenic IRBP epitope in frame with mouse IgG1 heavy chain. This construct was used to transduce peripheral B cells, which were infused into syngeneic recipients. A single infusion of transduced cells, 10 days before uveitogenic challenge, protected mice from clinical disease induced with the epitope or with the native IRBP protein. Protected mice had reduced antigen-specific responses, but showed no evidence for a classic Th1/Th2 response shift or for generalized anergy. Protection was not transferable, arguing against a mechanism dependent on regulatory cells. Importantly, the treatment was protective when initiated 7 days after uveitogenic immunization or concurrently with adoptive transfer of primed uveitogenic T cells. We suggest that this form of gene therapy can induce epitope-specific protection not only in naive, but also in already primed recipients, thus providing a protocol for treatment of established autoimmunity.
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页码:245 / 252
页数:8
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