Cellular immune response to cryptic epitopes during therapeutic gene transfer
- 30 June 2009
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 106 (26) , 10770-10774
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0902269106
Abstract
The immune response has been implicated as a critical factor in determining the success or failure of clinical gene therapy trials. Generally, such a response is elicited by the desired transgene product or, in some cases, the delivery system. In the current study, we report the previously uncharacterized finding that a therapeutic cassette currently being used for human investigation displays alternative reading frames (ARFs) that generate unwanted protein products to induce a cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response. In particular, we tested the hypothesis that antigenic epitopes derived from an ARF in coagulation factor IX (F9) cDNA can induce CTL reactivity, subsequently killing F9-expressing hepatocytes. One peptide (p18) of 3 candidates from an ARF of the F9 transgene induced CD8+ T cell reactivity in mice expressing the human MHC class I molecule B0702. Subsequently, upon systemic administration of adeno-associated virus (AAV) serotype 2 vectors packaged with the F9 transgene (AAV2/F9), a robust CD8+ CTL response was elicited against peptide p18. Of particular importance is that the ARF epitope-specific CTLs eliminated AAV2/F9-transduced hepatocytes but not AAV2/F9 codon-optimized (AAV2/F9-opt)-transduced liver cells in which p18 epitope was deleted. These results demonstrate a previously undiscovered mechanism by which CTL responses can be elicited by cryptic epitopes generated from a therapeutic transgene and have significant implications for all gene therapy modalities. Such unforeseen epitope generation warrants careful analysis of transgene sequences for ARFs to reduce the potential for adverse events arising from immune responses during clinical gene therapy protocols.Keywords
This publication has 25 references indexed in Scilit:
- Adeno-Associated Virus Type 2 (AAV2) Capsid-Specific Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes Eliminate Only Vector-Transduced Cells Coexpressing the AAV2 Capsid In VivoJournal of Virology, 2007
- Pre-existing AAV Capsid-specific CD8+ T Cells are Unable to Eliminate AAV-transduced HepatocytesMolecular Therapy, 2007
- Cross-Presentation of Adeno-Associated Virus Serotype 2 Capsids Activates Cytotoxic T Cells But Does Not Render Hepatocytes Effective Cytolytic TargetsHuman Gene Therapy, 2007
- Adeno-associated Virus Serotypes: Vector Toolkit for Human Gene TherapyPublished by Elsevier ,2006
- Determination of Specific CD4 and CD8 T Cell Epitopes after AAV2- and AAV8-hF.IX Gene TherapyMolecular Therapy, 2006
- Identification of mouse AAV capsid-specific CD8+ T cell epitopesMolecular Therapy, 2005
- Identification of Cryptic MHC I–restricted Epitopes Encoded by HIV-1 Alternative Reading FramesThe Journal of Experimental Medicine, 2004
- Constitutive Display of Cryptic Translation Products by MHC Class I MoleculesScience, 2003
- MHC class I-cestricted cytotoxic T lymphocytes to viral antigens destroy hepatocytes in mice infected with E1-deleted recombinant adenovirusesImmunity, 1994
- Point mutations define a sequence flanking the AUG initiator codon that modulates translation by eukaryotic ribosomesCell, 1986