Jenny A. Greig, Kelly M. Martins, Camilo Breton, R. Jason Lamontagne, Yanqing Zhu, Zhenning He, John White, Jing-Xu Zhu, Jessica A. Chichester, Qi Zheng, Zhe Zhang, Peter Bell, Lili Wang, James M. Wilson
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Integrated vector genomes may contribute to long-term expression in primate liver after AAV administration
The development of liver-based adeno-associated virus (AAV) gene therapies is facing concerns about limited efficiency and durability of transgene expression. We evaluated nonhuman primates following intravenous dosing of AAV8 and AAVrh10 vectors for over 2 years to better define the mechanism(s) of transduction that affect performance. High transduction of non-immunogenic transgenes was achieved, although expression declined over the first 90 days to reach a lower but stable steady state. More than 10% of hepatocytes contained single nuclear domains of vector DNA that persisted despite the loss of transgene expression. Greater reductions in vector DNA and RNA were observed with immunogenic transgenes. Genomic integration of vector sequences, including complex concatemeric structures, were detected in 1 out of 100 cells at broadly distributed loci that were not in proximity to genes associated with hepatocellular carcinoma. Our studies suggest that AAV-mediated transgene expression in primate hepatocytes occurs in two phases: high but short-lived expression from episomal genomes, followed by much lower but stable expression, likely from integrated vectors. Long-term expression of AAV transgenes in macaque liver is traced to integrated vectors.
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