Center for Molecular and Translational Cardiology, University of Heidelberg, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany.
Sci Transl Med. 2011 Jul 20;3(92):92ra64. doi: 10.1126/scitranslmed.3002097.
As a prerequisite for clinical application, we determined the long-term therapeutic effectiveness and safety of adeno-associated virus (AAV)-S100A1 gene therapy in a preclinical large animal model of heart failure. S100A1, a positive inotropic regulator of myocardial contractility, becomes depleted in failing cardiomyocytes in humans and animals, and myocardial-targeted S100A1 gene transfer rescues cardiac contractile function by restoring sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium (Ca(2+)) handling in acutely and chronically failing hearts in small animal models. We induced heart failure in domestic pigs by balloon occlusion of the left circumflex coronary artery, resulting in myocardial infarction. After 2 weeks, when the pigs displayed significant left ventricular contractile dysfunction, we administered, by retrograde coronary venous delivery, AAV serotype 9 (AAV9)-S100A1 to the left ventricular, non-infarcted myocardium. AAV9-luciferase and saline treatment served as control. At 14 weeks, both control groups showed significantly decreased myocardial S100A1 protein expression along with progressive deterioration of cardiac performance and left ventricular remodeling. AAV9-S100A1 treatment prevented and reversed these functional and structural changes by restoring cardiac S100A1 protein levels. S100A1 treatment normalized cardiomyocyte Ca(2+) cycling, sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium handling, and energy homeostasis. Transgene expression was restricted to cardiac tissue, and extracardiac organ function was uncompromised. This translational study shows the preclinical feasibility of long-term therapeutic effectiveness of and a favorable safety profile for cardiac AAV9-S100A1 gene therapy in a preclinical model of heart failure. Our results present a strong rationale for a clinical trial of S100A1 gene therapy for human heart failure that could potentially complement current strategies to treat end-stage heart failure.
作为临床应用的前提条件,我们在心力衰竭的临床前大型动物模型中确定了腺相关病毒(AAV)-S100A1 基因治疗的长期治疗效果和安全性。S100A1 是心肌收缩力的正性变力调节因子,在人类和动物的衰竭心肌细胞中耗尽,心肌靶向 S100A1 基因转移通过恢复小型动物模型中急性和慢性衰竭心脏的肌浆网钙(Ca(2+))处理来挽救心脏收缩功能。我们通过球囊阻塞左回旋冠状动脉在猪中诱导心力衰竭,导致心肌梗死。2 周后,当猪表现出明显的左心室收缩功能障碍时,我们通过逆行冠状静脉给予 AAV 血清型 9(AAV9)-S100A1 至左心室非梗死心肌。AAV9-荧光素酶和盐水治疗作为对照。在 14 周时,两组对照均显示心肌 S100A1 蛋白表达明显降低,同时心脏功能和左心室重构逐渐恶化。AAV9-S100A1 治疗通过恢复心脏 S100A1 蛋白水平来预防和逆转这些功能和结构变化。S100A1 治疗使肌浆网钙循环、肌浆网钙处理和能量稳态正常化。转基因表达仅限于心脏组织,并且不影响心脏外器官的功能。这项转化研究表明,在心力衰竭的临床前模型中,心脏 AAV9-S100A1 基因治疗具有长期治疗效果和良好的安全性。我们的研究结果为 S100A1 基因治疗人类心力衰竭的临床试验提供了强有力的理论依据,这可能会补充目前治疗终末期心力衰竭的策略。