4.8 Article

Engineering adeno-associated viral vectors to evade innate immune and inflammatory responses

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SCIENCE TRANSLATIONAL MEDICINE
卷 13, 期 580, 页码 -

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AMER ASSOC ADVANCEMENT SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abd3438

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资金

  1. Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering of Harvard University
  2. NIH [RM1 HG008525, EY026158]
  3. Howard Hughes Medical Fellowship
  4. European Research Council Consolidator Grant [617432]
  5. Kentucky Lions Eye Research Endowed Chair
  6. National Eye Research Centre, UK [BRI 021]
  7. Underwood Trust [8064]
  8. Ally Therapeutics
  9. European Research Council (ERC) [617432] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The study engineered AAV vectors by incorporating short DNA oligonucleotides to antagonize TLR9 activation, reducing innate immune responses and enhancing gene expression in clinically relevant animal models. The engineered vectors can avoid adverse reactions in some models, demonstrating a potential wider therapeutic window for AAV therapies.
Nucleic acids are used in many therapeutic modalities, including gene therapy, but their ability to trigger host immune responses in vivo can lead to decreased safety and efficacy. In the case of adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors, studies have shown that the genome of the vector activates Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9), a pattern recognition receptor that senses foreign DNA. Here, we engineered AAV vectors to be intrinsically less immunogenic by incorporating short DNA oligonucleotides that antagonize TLR9 activation directly into the vector genome. The engineered vectors elicited markedly reduced innate immune and T cell responses and enhanced gene expression in clinically relevant mouse and pig models across different tissues, including liver, muscle, and retina. Subretinal administration of higher-dose AAV in pigs resulted in photoreceptor pathology with microglia and T cell infiltration. These adverse findings were avoided in the contralateral eyes of the same animals that were injected with the engineered vectors. However, intravitreal injection of higher-dose AAV in macaques, a more immunogenic route of administration, showed that the engineered vector delayed but did not prevent clinical uveitis, suggesting that other immune factors in addition to TLR9 may contribute to intraocular inflammation in this model. Our results demonstrate that linking specific immunomodulatory noncoding sequences to much longer therapeutic nucleic acids can cloak the vector from inducing unwanted immune responses in multiple, but not all, models. This coupled immunomodulation strategy may widen the therapeutic window for AAV therapies as well as other DNA-based gene transfer methods.

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