Interindividual variability in transgene mRNA and protein production following adeno-associated virus gene therapy for hemophilia A
Author
Fong, SylviaYates, Bridget
Sihn, Choong-Ryoul
Mattis, Aras N
Mitchell, Nina
Liu, Su
Russell, Chris B
Kim, Benjamin
Lawal, Adebayo
Rangarajan, Savita
Lester, Will
Bunting, Stuart
Pierce, Glenn F
Pasi, K John
Wong, Wing Yen
Publication date
2022-04-11
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Factor VIII gene transfer with a single intravenous infusion of valoctocogene roxaparvovec (AAV5-hFVIII-SQ) has demonstrated clinical benefits lasting 5 years to date in people with severe hemophilia A. Molecular mechanisms underlying sustained AAV5-hFVIII-SQ-derived FVIII expression have not been studied in humans. In a substudy of the phase 1/2 clinical trial ( NCT02576795 ), liver biopsy samples were collected 2.6-4.1 years after gene transfer from five participants. Primary objectives were to examine effects on liver histopathology, determine the transduction pattern and percentage of hepatocytes transduced with AAV5-hFVIII-SQ genomes, characterize and quantify episomal forms of vector DNA and quantify transgene expression (hFVIII-SQ RNA and hFVIII-SQ protein). Histopathology revealed no dysplasia, architectural distortion, fibrosis or chronic inflammation, and no endoplasmic reticulum stress was detected in hepatocytes expressing hFVIII-SQ protein. Hepatocytes stained positive for vector genomes, showing a trend for more cells transduced with higher doses. Molecular analysis demonstrated the presence of full-length, inverted terminal repeat-fused, circular episomal genomes, which are associated with long-term expression. Interindividual differences in transgene expression were noted despite similar successful transduction, possibly influenced by host-mediated post-transduction mechanisms of vector transcription, hFVIII-SQ protein translation and secretion. Overall, these results demonstrate persistent episomal vector structures following AAV5-hFVIII-SQ administration and begin to elucidate potential mechanisms mediating interindividual variability.Citation
Fong S, Yates B, Sihn CR, Mattis AN, Mitchell N, Liu S, Russell CB, Kim B, Lawal A, Rangarajan S, Lester W, Bunting S, Pierce GF, Pasi KJ, Wong WY. Interindividual variability in transgene mRNA and protein production following adeno-associated virus gene therapy for hemophilia A. Nat Med. 2022 Apr;28(4):789-797. doi: 10.1038/s41591-022-01751-0. Epub 2022 Apr 11Type
ArticleOther
Additional Links
http://www.nature.com/nm/index.htmlPMID
35411075Journal
Nature MedicinePublisher
Nature Publishing Companyae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1038/s41591-022-01751-0