1. AAV-mediated co-expression of an immunogenic transgene plus PD-L1 enables sustained expression through immunological evasion.
- Author
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McMurphy TB, Park A, Heizer PJ, Bottenfield C, Kurasawa JH, Ikeda Y, and Doran MR
- Subjects
- Animals, Mice, Liver metabolism, Liver immunology, Humans, Immune Evasion genetics, Transduction, Genetic, Adipose Tissue metabolism, Adipose Tissue cytology, Adipose Tissue immunology, Mice, Inbred C57BL, B7-H1 Antigen metabolism, B7-H1 Antigen genetics, Transgenes, Dependovirus genetics, Genetic Vectors genetics
- Abstract
Adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors can mediate long-term expression of immunogenic transgenes in vivo through transduction of tolerogenic cells in the liver. Tissue-targeted AAV vectors allow transduction of non-hepatic cells, but this necessitates development of strategies to minimize transgene immunogenicity. Here, we first validated that AAV capsids with tissue-specific tropism and transgene promoters enabled expression of the immunogenic protein, firefly luciferase, in liver, muscle, or adipose tissue. Cellular immunity was detectable in animals where luciferase was expressed in muscle or adipose, but not liver tissue. With the objective of enhancing tolerance of transduced non-hepatic cells, AAV vectors were engineered to co-express luciferase plus the immune checkpoint protein, PD-L1. In animals where transduced cells expressed luciferase but not PD-L1, there was incremental depletion of transduced cells over time. By contrast, the bioluminescent signal increased incrementally over the study, and was significantly greater, in the muscle and adipose tissue of animals where PD-L1 was co-expressed with luciferase. Our data demonstrate that PD-L1 co-expression facilitates persistent, tissue-targeted expression of immunogenic transgenes without transducing tolerogenic hepatic cells. Our strategy of PD-L1 co-expression may provide a versatile platform for sustained expression of immunogenic transgenes in gene and cell therapies., Competing Interests: Declarations. Ethics declarations: All animal experiments were approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee of AstraZeneca (Gaithersburg, Maryland) and performed as per the approved guidelines. Animal studies complied with the ARRIVE guidelines. Competing interests: The studies reported here were completed at AstraZeneca, and P.J.H, C.B., J.H.K, Y.I. and M.R.D. are employed by AstraZeneca PLC., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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