Petrof B J, Lochmüller H, Massie B, Yang L, Macmillan C, Zhao J E, Nalbantoglu J, Karpati G
Department of Medicine, Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Hum Gene Ther. 1996 Oct 1;7(15):1813-26. doi: 10.1089/hum.1996.7.15-1813.
Recombinant adenovirus vectors (AdV) hold promise as a means of delivering therapeutic genes to muscle in diseases such as Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). However, we have previously shown that the use of AdV is hampered by the development of reduced force-generating capacity, which occurs within 1 week and is progressive up to at least 1 month after AdV delivery in immune-competent animals. Determinations of muscle force production provide a sensitive and clinically important measure of potential adverse effects of AdV-mediated gene transfer on muscle cell function. In the present study, we investigated the role of AdV-related gene expression and host T lymphocyte responses in the genesis of muscle dysfunction following AdV injection of muscle. We report that UV-irradiation of AdV particles, which reduced AdV transcriptional activity without impairing infectivity (as confirmed by in situ polymerase chain reaction), significantly reversed early (4 days post-injection) AdV-induced contractile impairment in immune-competent mice as well as in mice lacking effective CD8+ T cell activity. The superimposed additional reduction in force-generating capacity normally found between 4 and 30 days post-AdV delivery in immune-competent mice, along with the associated loss of transgene (beta-galactosidase) expression, was largely abrogated by the absence of an intact CD8+ T lymphocyte response. Furthermore, short-term administration of a neutralizing antibody against CD4+ T cells significantly prolonged transgene expression and showed a trend toward mitigation of AdV-induced reductions in force-generating capacity. Cellular infiltration and humoral immune responses against the vector and transgene product were also blunted to varying degrees in the setting of CD8+ or CD4+ T cell deficiency. We conclude that AdV-related gene expression has an early negative (probably toxic) effect on muscle cell function that is independent of CD8+ T cell-mediated immunity. In contrast, further progression of contractile impairment and the accompanying loss of transgene expression from AdV-injected muscle are largely dependent upon the activity of CD8+ T cells. These results have implications for the design of future generation vectors and the potential need for immunosuppressive therapy after AdV-mediated gene transfer to muscle.
重组腺病毒载体(AdV)有望成为向杜氏肌营养不良症(DMD)等疾病的肌肉中递送治疗性基因的一种手段。然而,我们之前已经表明,在免疫健全的动物中,AdV的使用受到产生力的能力下降的阻碍,这种情况在AdV递送后1周内出现,并持续进展至少1个月。肌肉力产生的测定为AdV介导的基因转移对肌肉细胞功能的潜在不良反应提供了一种敏感且具有临床重要性的衡量指标。在本研究中,我们调查了AdV相关基因表达和宿主T淋巴细胞反应在AdV注射肌肉后肌肉功能障碍发生过程中的作用。我们报告称,对AdV颗粒进行紫外线照射可降低AdV转录活性而不损害其感染性(原位聚合酶链反应证实),这显著逆转了免疫健全小鼠以及缺乏有效CD8 + T细胞活性的小鼠早期(注射后4天)AdV诱导的收缩功能障碍。在免疫健全小鼠中,通常在AdV递送后4至30天之间出现的产生力能力的额外下降,以及相关的转基因(β-半乳糖苷酶)表达丧失,在缺乏完整CD8 + T淋巴细胞反应的情况下基本被消除。此外,短期给予抗CD4 + T细胞的中和抗体可显著延长转基因表达,并显示出减轻AdV诱导的产生力能力下降的趋势。在CD8 + 或CD4 + T细胞缺乏的情况下,针对载体和转基因产物的细胞浸润和体液免疫反应也不同程度地受到抑制。我们得出结论,AdV相关基因表达对肌肉细胞功能有早期负面(可能是毒性)影响,且独立于CD8 + T细胞介导的免疫。相比之下,AdV注射肌肉后收缩功能障碍的进一步进展以及随之而来的转基因表达丧失在很大程度上取决于CD8 + T细胞的活性。这些结果对下一代载体的设计以及AdV介导的基因转移至肌肉后潜在的免疫抑制治疗需求具有启示意义。