Affiliation:
1. Institute for Human Gene Therapy and Department of Molecular and Cellular Engineering, University of Pennsylvania, and Wistar Institute, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The activation of cytotoxic T lymphocytes (CTLs) to cells infected with adenovirus vectors contributes to problems of inflammation and transient gene expression that attend their use in gene therapy. The goal of this study was to identify in a murine model of liver gene therapy the proteins that provide targets to CTLs and to characterize the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) class I restricting elements. Mice of different MHC haplotypes were infected with an E1-deleted adenovirus expressing human alkaline phosphatase (ALP) or β-galactosidase as a reporter protein, and splenocytes were harvested for in vitro CTL assays to aid in the characterization of CTL epitopes. A library of vaccinia viruses was created to express individual viral open reading frames, as well as the ALP and
lacZ
transgenes. The MHC haplotype had a dramatic impact on the distribution of CTL targets: in C57BL/6 mice, the hexon protein presented by both H-2K
b
and H2D
b
was dominant, and in C3H mice, H-2D
k
-restricted presentation of ALP was dominant. Adoptive transfer of CTLs specific for various adenovirus proteins or transgene products into either Rag-I or C3H-scid mice infected previously with an E1-deleted adenovirus verified the in vivo relevance of the adenovirus-specific CTL targets identified in vitro. The results of these experiments illustrate the impact of lr gene control on the response to gene therapy with adenovirus vectors and suggest that the efficacy of therapy with adenovirus vectors may exhibit considerable heterogeneity when applied in human populations.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology
Cited by
113 articles.
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