4.6 Article

Respiratory Syncytial Virus Engineered To Express the Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator Corrects the Bioelectric Phenotype of Human Cystic Fibrosis Airway Epithelium In Vitro

Journal

JOURNAL OF VIROLOGY
Volume 84, Issue 15, Pages 7770-7781

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JVI.00346-10

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [PO1 HL051818]
  2. NIH Molecular Therapy Core Center [P30 DK065988-01]
  3. Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital
  4. NIAID, NIH

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Cystic fibrosis (CF) is the most common lethal recessive genetic disease in the Caucasian population. It is caused by mutations in the CF transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene that is normally expressed in ciliated airway epithelial cells and the submucosal glands of the lung. Since the CFTR gene was first characterized in 1989, a major goal has been to develop an effective gene therapy for CF lung disease, which has the potential to ameliorate morbidity and mortality. Respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) naturally infects the ciliated cells in the human airway epithelium. In addition, the immune response mounted against an RSV infection does not prevent subsequent infections, suggesting that an RSV-based vector might be effectively readministered. To test whether the large 4.5-kb CFTR gene could be expressed by a recombinant RSV and whether infectious virus could be used to deliver CFTR to ciliated airway epithelium derived from CF patients, we inserted the CFTR gene into four sites in a recombinant green fluorescent protein-expressing RSV (rgRSV) genome to generate virus expressing four different levels of CFTR protein. Two of these four rgRSV-CFTR vectors were capable of expressing CFTR with little effect on viral replication. rgRSV-CFTR infection of primary human airway epithelial cultures derived from CF patients resulted in expression of CFTR protein that was properly localized at the luminal surface and corrected the chloride ion channel defect in these cells.

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