Endoscopic-mediated, biliary hydrodynamic injection mediating clinically relevant levels of gene delivery in pig liver - 17/11/21
Abstract |
Background and Aims |
Gene therapy could provide curative therapies to many inherited monogenic liver diseases. Clinical trials have largely focused on adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) for liver gene delivery. These vectors, however, are limited by small packaging size, capsid immune responses, and inability to redose. As an alternative, nonviral, hydrodynamic injection through vascular routes can successfully deliver plasmid DNA (pDNA) into mouse liver but has achieved limited success in large animal models.
Methods |
We explored hydrodynamic delivery of pDNA through the biliary system into the liver of pigs using ERCP and a power injector to supply hydrodynamic force. Human factor IX (hFIX), deficient in hemophilia B, was used as a model gene therapy.
Results |
Biliary hydrodynamic injection was well tolerated without significant changes in vital signs, liver enzymes, hematology, or histology. No off-target pDNA delivery to other organs was detected by polymerase chain reaction. Immunohistochemistry revealed that 50.19% of the liver stained positive for hFIX after hydrodynamic injection at 5.5 mg pDNA, with every hepatic lobule in all liver lobes demonstrating hFIX expression. hFIX-positive hepatocytes were concentrated around the central vein, radiating outward across all 3 metabolic zones. Biliary hydrodynamic injection in pigs resulted in significantly higher transfection efficiency than mouse vascular hydrodynamic injection at matched pDNA per liver weight dose (32.7%-51.9% vs 18.9%, P < .0001).
Conclusions |
Biliary hydrodynamic injection using ERCP can achieve higher transfection efficiency into hepatocytes compared with AAVs at magnitudes of less cost in a clinically relevant human-sized large animal. This technology may serve as a platform for gene therapy of human liver diseases.
Il testo completo di questo articolo è disponibile in PDF.Graphical abstract |
Abbreviations : AAV, CHD, hFIX, HTVI, pDNA
Mappa
| DISCLOSURE: The following authors disclosed financial relationships: V. Kumbhari, Scientific Advisory Board member for FujiFilm. R. L. Kruse, Y. Huang, F. M. Selaru, V. Kumbhari: Patent application filed on the work. All other authors disclosed no financial relationships. Research support for this study (R. L. Kruse, Y. Huang, V. Kumbhari) was provided by the Johns Hopkins Hospital GI Core Center Pilot Project grant (1P30DK089502-01). |
Vol 94 - N° 6
P. 1119 - dicembre 2021 Ritorno al numeroBenvenuto su EM|consulte, il riferimento dei professionisti della salute.
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