Humeau Laurent M, Binder Gwendolyn K, Lu Xiaobin, Slepushkin Vladimir, Merling Randall, Echeagaray Patricia, Pereira Mario, Slepushkina Tatiana, Barnett Scott, Dropulic Lesia K, Carroll Richard, Levine Bruce L, June Carl H, Dropulic Boro
VIRxSYS Corporation, Gaithersburg, MD 20877, USA.
Mol Ther. 2004 Jun;9(6):902-13. doi: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2004.03.005.
We present preclinical studies that demonstrate in vitro the feasibility and efficacy of lentivirus-based vector antisense gene therapy for control of HIV replication in primary T lymphocytes isolated from HIV-infected patients discordant for clinical status. VRX496 is a VSV-G-pseudotyped HIV-based vector that encodes an antisense payload against the HIV envelope gene. The antisense payload is under the control of the native LTR promoter, which is highly transactivated by tat upon HIV infection in the cell. Transfer of autologous CD4(+) T lymphocytes genetically modified with VRX496 (VRX496T) into HIV-infected patients is intended to provide a reservoir of cells capable of controlling HIV, potentially delaying AIDS onset. To determine the patient population likely to respond to VRX496 for optimal efficacy, we examined the ability of our research vector, VRX494, to modify and suppress HIV in vitro in lymphocytes isolated from 20 study subjects discordant for CD4 count and viral load. VRX494 is analogous to the clinical vector VRX496, except that it contains GFP as a marker gene instead of the 186-tag marker in the clinical vector. To transfer VRX494 to target cells we developed a novel scalable two-step transduction procedure that has been translated to the clinic in an ongoing clinical trial. This procedure achieved unprecedented transduction efficiencies of 94 +/- 5% in HIV(+) study subject cells. In addition the vector inhibited HIV replication >/=93% in culture regardless of the viral load or CD4 count of the subject or tropism of the virus strain with which they were infected. These findings demonstrate that VRX496T therapy is expected to be beneficial to patients that differ in their status in term of CD4 count and viral load. The methods described represent significant technical advances facilitating execution of lentivirus vector-mediated gene therapy for treatment of HIV and are currently being employed in the first trial evaluating lentivirus vector safety in humans.
我们展示了临床前研究,这些研究在体外证明了基于慢病毒载体的反义基因疗法在控制从临床状态不一致的HIV感染患者中分离出的原代T淋巴细胞中HIV复制方面的可行性和有效性。VRX496是一种VSV-G假型化的基于HIV的载体,其编码针对HIV包膜基因的反义载荷。该反义载荷受天然LTR启动子的控制,在细胞中HIV感染时,tat会高度激活该启动子。将经VRX496基因改造的自体CD4(+) T淋巴细胞(VRX496T)转移到HIV感染患者体内,旨在提供一个能够控制HIV的细胞库,有可能延缓艾滋病的发病。为了确定可能对VRX496有最佳疗效反应的患者群体,我们检测了我们的研究载体VRX494在体外对从20名CD4计数和病毒载量不一致的研究对象中分离出的淋巴细胞进行改造和抑制HIV的能力。VRX494与临床载体VRX496类似,只是它含有绿色荧光蛋白(GFP)作为标记基因,而不是临床载体中的186-tag标记。为了将VRX494转移到靶细胞,我们开发了一种新型的可扩展两步转导程序,该程序已在一项正在进行的临床试验中转化应用于临床。该程序在HIV(+)研究对象细胞中实现了前所未有的94±5%的转导效率。此外,无论研究对象的病毒载量或CDI计数如何,也无论他们感染的病毒株的嗜性如何,该载体在培养物中均能抑制HIV复制≥93%。这些发现表明,VRX496T疗法预计对CD4计数和病毒载量状态不同的患者有益。所描述的方法代表了重大的技术进步,有助于实施慢病毒载体介导的基因疗法来治疗HIV,并且目前正用于评估慢病毒载体在人体安全性的首次试验中。