Overexpression of factor VIII after AAV delivery is transiently associated with cellular stress in hemophilia A mice

Amy M. Lange(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Ekaterina Altynova(University of Pennsylvania), Giang N. Nguyen(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia), Denise E. Sabatino(Children's Hospital of Philadelphia)
Molecular Therapy — Methods & Clinical Development
January 1, 2016
Cited by 74Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

. Several studies suggest that high levels of FVIII expression can lead to cellular stress. After gene transfer, transgene expression is restricted to a subset of cells and the increased FVIII load per cell may impact activation of the unfolded protein response. We sought to determine whether increased FVIII expression in mice after adeno-associated viral liver gene transfer would affect the unfolded protein response and/or immune response to the transgene. The FVIII gene was delivered as B-domain deleted single chain or two chain (light and heavy chains) at a range of doses in hemophilia A mice. A correlation between FVIII expression and anti-FVIII antibody titers was observed. Analysis of key components of the unfolded protein response, binding immunoglobulin protein (BiP), and C/EBP homologous protein (CHOP), showed transient unfolded protein response activation in the single chain treated group expressing >200% of FVIII but not after two chain delivery. These studies suggest that supraphysiological single chain FVIII expression may increase the likelihood of a cellular stress response but does not alter liver function. These data are in agreement with the observed long-term expression of FVIII at therapeutic levels after adeno-associated viral delivery in hemophilia A dogs without evidence of cellular toxicity.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis