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Double-stranded RNA innate immune response activation from long-term adeno-associated virus vector transduction
Wenwei Shao, Lauriel F. Earley, Zheng Chai, Xiaojing Chen, Junjiang Sun, Ting He, Meng Deng, Matthew L. Hirsch, Jenny Ting, R. Jude Samulski, Chengwen Li
Wenwei Shao, Lauriel F. Earley, Zheng Chai, Xiaojing Chen, Junjiang Sun, Ting He, Meng Deng, Matthew L. Hirsch, Jenny Ting, R. Jude Samulski, Chengwen Li
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Research Article Immunology Therapeutics

Double-stranded RNA innate immune response activation from long-term adeno-associated virus vector transduction

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Abstract

Data from clinical trials for hemophilia B using adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors have demonstrated decreased transgenic coagulation factor IX (hFIX) expression 6–10 weeks after administration of a high vector dose. While it is likely that capsid-specific cytotoxic T lymphocytes eliminate vector-transduced hepatocytes, thereby resulting in decreased hFIX, this observation is not intuitively consistent with restored hFIX levels following prednisone application. Although the innate immune response is immediately activated following AAV vector infection via TLR pathways, no studies exist regarding the role of the innate immune response at later time points after AAV vector transduction. Herein, activation of the innate immune response in cell lines, primary human hepatocytes, and hepatocytes in a human chimeric mouse model was observed at later time points following AAV vector transduction. Mechanistic analysis demonstrated that the double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) sensor MDA5 was necessary for innate immune response activation and that transient knockdown of MDA5, or MAVS, decreased IFN-β expression while increasing transgene production in AAV-transduced cells. These results both highlight the role of the dsRNA-triggered innate immune response in therapeutic transgene expression at later time points following AAV transduction and facilitate the execution of effective strategies to block the dsRNA innate immune response in future clinical trials.

Authors

Wenwei Shao, Lauriel F. Earley, Zheng Chai, Xiaojing Chen, Junjiang Sun, Ting He, Meng Deng, Matthew L. Hirsch, Jenny Ting, R. Jude Samulski, Chengwen Li

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Figure 3

Minus strand transcript generation in AAV-transduced cells.

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Minus strand transcript generation in AAV-transduced cells.
(A) Overview...
(A) Overview of the gene-specific reverse transcription to detect either plus or minus strand transcripts. HeLa cells were harvested at day 8 after AAV2/luciferase transduction. The RNA was extracted and treated with DNase. Specific primers for plus strand or minus strand luciferase were used to synthesize different orientations of the cDNA. PCR was performed to detect the transcripts in different orientations of cDNA using primer pair 1 (F1 and R1) and primer pair 2 (F2 and R2). (B) PCR products are shown. PBS was used as a negative control with no AAV virus. The pTR/luciferase plasmid served as positive control for the PCR. RNA was used as a template to eliminate the possibility of AAV genome DNA contamination in extracted RNA. To measure the yield of transcripts, cDNA in different orientations was diluted to 20-, 200-, or 2,000-fold as PCR templates.

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ISSN 2379-3708

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