Sequestration of Adenoviral Vector by Kupffer Cells Leads to a Nonlinear Dose Response of Transduction in Liver

Systemic administration of a recombinant adenovirus encoding the human interferon-β gene (H5.110CMVhIFN-β) results in transduction of hepatocytes and detectable circulating levels of IFN-β protein. In preclinical studies in mice, we noticed a distinctly nonlinear dose response, with low levels of vi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular therapy 2001-01, Vol.3 (1), p.28-35
Hauptverfasser: Tao, Nianjun, Gao, Guang-Ping, Parr, Michael, Johnston, Julie, Baradet, Timothy, Wilson, James M., Barsoum, James, Fawell, Stephen E.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Systemic administration of a recombinant adenovirus encoding the human interferon-β gene (H5.110CMVhIFN-β) results in transduction of hepatocytes and detectable circulating levels of IFN-β protein. In preclinical studies in mice, we noticed a distinctly nonlinear dose response, with low levels of virus (1–3 × 1010 viral particles) yielding barely detectable levels of IFN-β but with a higher viral dose (1 × 1011 particles) resulting in disproportionately high IFN-β levels. Further studies showed that transgene expression levels from low viral doses could be dramatically enhanced by coadministering an unrelated recombinant adenovirus (H5.110CMVlacZ), suggesting that there was a viral dose threshold effect for efficient viral transduction and/or IFN-β expression. This enhancement of reporter expression by a nonreporter adenovirus, effective upon coadministration, was further enhanced by preadministration of H5.110CMVlacZ (up to 8 h), but was ineffective if the helper virus was administered as little as 5 min after the H5.110CMVhIFN-β reporter virus. Our data suggest that the reticuloendothelial system plays a role in this threshold effect, such that low doses of virus are efficiently taken up by the RES/Kupffer cells without leading to appreciable transgene expression, whereas high doses saturate these cells and are able to productively transduce hepatocytes. A better understanding of this phenomenon could have an impact on gene therapy clinical trial safety and efficacy.
ISSN:1525-0016
1525-0024
DOI:10.1006/mthe.2000.0227