Reduced Sensitivity to Human Serum Inactivation of Enveloped Viruses Produced by Pig Cells Transgenic for Human CD55 or Deficient for the Galactosyl-α(1-3) Galactosyl Epitope

Author:

Magre Saema1,Takeuchi Yasuhiro1,Langford Gillian2,Richards Andrew2,Patience Clive3,Weiss Robin1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Immunology and Molecular Pathology, University College London, London

2. Imutran Ltd. (a Novartis Pharma A.G. Company), Cambridge, United Kingdom

3. Immerge BioTherapeutics Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts

Abstract

ABSTRACT Complement activation mediated by the major xenogeneic epitope in the pig, galactosyl-α(1-3) galactosyl sugar structure (α-Gal), and human natural antibodies could cause hyperacute rejection (HAR) in pig-to-human xenotransplantation. The same reaction on viruses bearing α-Gal may serve as a barrier to zoonotic infection. Expressing human complement regulatory proteins or knocking out α-Gal epitopes in pig in order to overcome HAR may therefore pose an increased risk in xenotransplantation with regard to zoonosis. We investigated whether amphotropic murine leukemia virus, porcine endogenous retrovirus, and vesicular stomatitis virus (VSV) budding from primary transgenic pig aortic endothelial (TgPAE) cells expressing human CD55 (hCD55 or hDAF) was protected from human-complement-mediated inactivation. VSV propagated through the ST-IOWA pig cell line, in which α-galactosyl-transferase genes were disrupted (Gal null), was also tested for sensitivity to human complement. The TgPAE cells were positive for hCD55, and all pig cells except the Gal-null ST-IOWA expressed α-Gal epitopes. Through antibody binding, we were able to demonstrate the incorporation of hCD55 onto VSV particles. Viruses harvested from TgPAE cells were relatively resistant to complement-mediated inactivation by the three sources of human sera tested. Additionally, VSV from Gal-null pig cells was resistant to human complement inactivation. Such protection of enveloped viruses may increase the risk of zoonosis from pigs genetically modified for pig-to-human xenotransplantation.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Virology,Insect Science,Immunology,Microbiology

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