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A normothermic ex vivo organ perfusion delivery method for cardiac transplantation gene therapy

Clinically, both percutaneous and surgical approaches to deliver viral vectors to the heart either have resulted in therapeutically inadequate levels of transgene expression or have raised safety concerns associated with extra-cardiac delivery. Recent developments in the field of normothermic ex viv...

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Autores principales: Bishawi, Muath, Roan, Jun-Neng, Milano, Carmelo A., Daneshmand, Mani A, Schroder, Jacob N., Chiang, Yuting, Lee, Franklin H., Brown, Zachary D., Nevo, Adam, Watson, Michael J., Rowell, Trevelyn, Paul, Sally, Lezberg, Paul, Walczak, Richard, Bowles, Dawn E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group UK 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6541710/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31142753
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-43737-y
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author Bishawi, Muath
Roan, Jun-Neng
Milano, Carmelo A.
Daneshmand, Mani A
Schroder, Jacob N.
Chiang, Yuting
Lee, Franklin H.
Brown, Zachary D.
Nevo, Adam
Watson, Michael J.
Rowell, Trevelyn
Paul, Sally
Lezberg, Paul
Walczak, Richard
Bowles, Dawn E.
author_facet Bishawi, Muath
Roan, Jun-Neng
Milano, Carmelo A.
Daneshmand, Mani A
Schroder, Jacob N.
Chiang, Yuting
Lee, Franklin H.
Brown, Zachary D.
Nevo, Adam
Watson, Michael J.
Rowell, Trevelyn
Paul, Sally
Lezberg, Paul
Walczak, Richard
Bowles, Dawn E.
author_sort Bishawi, Muath
collection PubMed
description Clinically, both percutaneous and surgical approaches to deliver viral vectors to the heart either have resulted in therapeutically inadequate levels of transgene expression or have raised safety concerns associated with extra-cardiac delivery. Recent developments in the field of normothermic ex vivo cardiac perfusion storage have now created opportunities to overcome these limitations and safety concerns of cardiac gene therapy. This study examined the feasibility of ex vivo perfusion as an approach to deliver a viral vector to a donor heart during storage and the resulting bio distribution and expression levels of the transgene in the recipient post-transplant. The influence of components (proprietary solution, donor blood, and ex vivo circuitry tubing and oxygenators) of the Organ Care System (OC) (TransMedics, Inc., Andover MA) on viral vector transduction was examined using a cell-based luciferase assay. Our ex vivo perfusion strategy, optimized for efficient Adenoviral vector transduction, was utilized to deliver 5 × 10(13) total viral particles of an Adenoviral firefly luciferase vector with a cytomegalovirus (CMV) promotor to porcine donor hearts prior to heterotopic implantation. We have evaluated the overall levels of expression, protein activity, as well as the bio distribution of the firefly luciferase protein in a series of three heart transplants at a five-day post-transplant endpoint. The perfusion solution and the ex vivo circuitry did not influence viral vector transduction, but the serum or plasma fractions of the donor blood significantly inhibited viral vector transduction. Thus, subsequent gene delivery experiments to the explanted porcine heart utilized an autologous blood recovery approach to remove undesired plasma or serum components of the donor blood prior to its placement into the circuit. Enzymatic assessment of luciferase activity in tissues (native heart, allograft, liver etc.) obtained post-transplant day five revealed wide-spread and robust luciferase activity in all regions of the allograft (right and left atria, right and left ventricles, coronary arteries) compared to the native recipient heart. Importantly, luciferase activity in recipient heart, liver, lung, spleen, or psoas muscle was within background levels. Similar to luciferase activity, the luciferase protein expression in the allograft appeared uniform and robust across all areas of the myocardium as well as in the coronary arteries. Importantly, despite high copy number of vector genomic DNA in transplanted heart tissue, there was no evidence of vector DNA in either the recipient’s native heart or liver. Overall we demonstrate a simple protocol to achieve substantial, global gene delivery and expression isolated to the cardiac allograft. This introduces a novel method of viral vector delivery that opens the opportunity for biological modification of the allograft prior to implantation that may improve post-transplant outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-65417102019-06-07 A normothermic ex vivo organ perfusion delivery method for cardiac transplantation gene therapy Bishawi, Muath Roan, Jun-Neng Milano, Carmelo A. Daneshmand, Mani A Schroder, Jacob N. Chiang, Yuting Lee, Franklin H. Brown, Zachary D. Nevo, Adam Watson, Michael J. Rowell, Trevelyn Paul, Sally Lezberg, Paul Walczak, Richard Bowles, Dawn E. Sci Rep Article Clinically, both percutaneous and surgical approaches to deliver viral vectors to the heart either have resulted in therapeutically inadequate levels of transgene expression or have raised safety concerns associated with extra-cardiac delivery. Recent developments in the field of normothermic ex vivo cardiac perfusion storage have now created opportunities to overcome these limitations and safety concerns of cardiac gene therapy. This study examined the feasibility of ex vivo perfusion as an approach to deliver a viral vector to a donor heart during storage and the resulting bio distribution and expression levels of the transgene in the recipient post-transplant. The influence of components (proprietary solution, donor blood, and ex vivo circuitry tubing and oxygenators) of the Organ Care System (OC) (TransMedics, Inc., Andover MA) on viral vector transduction was examined using a cell-based luciferase assay. Our ex vivo perfusion strategy, optimized for efficient Adenoviral vector transduction, was utilized to deliver 5 × 10(13) total viral particles of an Adenoviral firefly luciferase vector with a cytomegalovirus (CMV) promotor to porcine donor hearts prior to heterotopic implantation. We have evaluated the overall levels of expression, protein activity, as well as the bio distribution of the firefly luciferase protein in a series of three heart transplants at a five-day post-transplant endpoint. The perfusion solution and the ex vivo circuitry did not influence viral vector transduction, but the serum or plasma fractions of the donor blood significantly inhibited viral vector transduction. Thus, subsequent gene delivery experiments to the explanted porcine heart utilized an autologous blood recovery approach to remove undesired plasma or serum components of the donor blood prior to its placement into the circuit. Enzymatic assessment of luciferase activity in tissues (native heart, allograft, liver etc.) obtained post-transplant day five revealed wide-spread and robust luciferase activity in all regions of the allograft (right and left atria, right and left ventricles, coronary arteries) compared to the native recipient heart. Importantly, luciferase activity in recipient heart, liver, lung, spleen, or psoas muscle was within background levels. Similar to luciferase activity, the luciferase protein expression in the allograft appeared uniform and robust across all areas of the myocardium as well as in the coronary arteries. Importantly, despite high copy number of vector genomic DNA in transplanted heart tissue, there was no evidence of vector DNA in either the recipient’s native heart or liver. Overall we demonstrate a simple protocol to achieve substantial, global gene delivery and expression isolated to the cardiac allograft. This introduces a novel method of viral vector delivery that opens the opportunity for biological modification of the allograft prior to implantation that may improve post-transplant outcomes. Nature Publishing Group UK 2019-05-29 /pmc/articles/PMC6541710/ /pubmed/31142753 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-43737-y Text en © The Author(s) 2019 Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons license and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Article
Bishawi, Muath
Roan, Jun-Neng
Milano, Carmelo A.
Daneshmand, Mani A
Schroder, Jacob N.
Chiang, Yuting
Lee, Franklin H.
Brown, Zachary D.
Nevo, Adam
Watson, Michael J.
Rowell, Trevelyn
Paul, Sally
Lezberg, Paul
Walczak, Richard
Bowles, Dawn E.
A normothermic ex vivo organ perfusion delivery method for cardiac transplantation gene therapy
title A normothermic ex vivo organ perfusion delivery method for cardiac transplantation gene therapy
title_full A normothermic ex vivo organ perfusion delivery method for cardiac transplantation gene therapy
title_fullStr A normothermic ex vivo organ perfusion delivery method for cardiac transplantation gene therapy
title_full_unstemmed A normothermic ex vivo organ perfusion delivery method for cardiac transplantation gene therapy
title_short A normothermic ex vivo organ perfusion delivery method for cardiac transplantation gene therapy
title_sort normothermic ex vivo organ perfusion delivery method for cardiac transplantation gene therapy
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6541710/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31142753
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-43737-y
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