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Transduction of Salivary Gland Acinar Cells with a Novel AAV Vector 44.9

The loss of salivary gland function caused by radiation therapy of the head and neck or autoimmune disease such as Sjögren’s syndrome is a serious condition that affects a patient’s quality of life. Due to the combined exocrine and endocrine functions of the salivary gland, gene transfer to the sali...

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Autores principales: Di Pasquale, Giovanni, Perez Riveros, Paola, Tora, Muhibullah, Sheikh, Tayyab, Son, Aran, Teos, Leyla, Grewe, Brigitte, Swaim, William D., Afione, Sandra, Zheng, Changyu, Jang, Shyh-Ing, Shitara, Akiko, Alevizos, Ilias, Weigert, Roberto, Chiorini, John A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7689275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33294494
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.omtm.2020.10.006
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author Di Pasquale, Giovanni
Perez Riveros, Paola
Tora, Muhibullah
Sheikh, Tayyab
Son, Aran
Teos, Leyla
Grewe, Brigitte
Swaim, William D.
Afione, Sandra
Zheng, Changyu
Jang, Shyh-Ing
Shitara, Akiko
Alevizos, Ilias
Weigert, Roberto
Chiorini, John A.
author_facet Di Pasquale, Giovanni
Perez Riveros, Paola
Tora, Muhibullah
Sheikh, Tayyab
Son, Aran
Teos, Leyla
Grewe, Brigitte
Swaim, William D.
Afione, Sandra
Zheng, Changyu
Jang, Shyh-Ing
Shitara, Akiko
Alevizos, Ilias
Weigert, Roberto
Chiorini, John A.
author_sort Di Pasquale, Giovanni
collection PubMed
description The loss of salivary gland function caused by radiation therapy of the head and neck or autoimmune disease such as Sjögren’s syndrome is a serious condition that affects a patient’s quality of life. Due to the combined exocrine and endocrine functions of the salivary gland, gene transfer to the salivary glands holds the potential for developing therapies for disorders of the salivary gland and the expression of therapeutic proteins via the exocrine pathway to the mouth, upper gastrointestinal tract, or endocrine pathway, systemically, into the blood. Recent clinical success with viral vector–mediated gene transfer for the treatment of irradiation-induced damage to the salivary glands has highlighted the need for the development of novel vectors with acinar cell tropism able to result in stable long-term transduction. Previous studies with adeno-associated virus (AAV) focused on the submandibular gland and reported mostly ductal cell transduction. In this study, we have screened AAV vectors for acinar cell tropism in the parotid gland utilizing membrane-tomato floxed membrane-GFP transgenic mice to screen CRE recombinase encoding AAV vectors of different clades to rapidly identify capsid isolates able to transduce salivary gland acinar cells. We determined that AAVRh10 and a novel isolate found as a contaminant of a laboratory stock of simian adenovirus SV15, AAV44.9, are both able to transduce parotid and sublingual acinar cells. Persistence and localization of transduction of these AAVs were tested using vectors encoding firefly luciferase, which was detected 6 months after vector administration. Most luciferase expression was localized to the salivary gland compared to that of distal organs. Transduction resulted in robust secretion of recombinant protein in both blood and saliva. Transduction was species specific, with AAVRh10 having stronger transduction activity in rats compared with AAV44.9 or AAV2 but weaker in human primary salivary gland cells. This work demonstrates efficient transduction of parotid acinar cells by AAV that resulted in secretion of recombinant protein in both serum and saliva.
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spelling pubmed-76892752020-12-07 Transduction of Salivary Gland Acinar Cells with a Novel AAV Vector 44.9 Di Pasquale, Giovanni Perez Riveros, Paola Tora, Muhibullah Sheikh, Tayyab Son, Aran Teos, Leyla Grewe, Brigitte Swaim, William D. Afione, Sandra Zheng, Changyu Jang, Shyh-Ing Shitara, Akiko Alevizos, Ilias Weigert, Roberto Chiorini, John A. Mol Ther Methods Clin Dev Original Article The loss of salivary gland function caused by radiation therapy of the head and neck or autoimmune disease such as Sjögren’s syndrome is a serious condition that affects a patient’s quality of life. Due to the combined exocrine and endocrine functions of the salivary gland, gene transfer to the salivary glands holds the potential for developing therapies for disorders of the salivary gland and the expression of therapeutic proteins via the exocrine pathway to the mouth, upper gastrointestinal tract, or endocrine pathway, systemically, into the blood. Recent clinical success with viral vector–mediated gene transfer for the treatment of irradiation-induced damage to the salivary glands has highlighted the need for the development of novel vectors with acinar cell tropism able to result in stable long-term transduction. Previous studies with adeno-associated virus (AAV) focused on the submandibular gland and reported mostly ductal cell transduction. In this study, we have screened AAV vectors for acinar cell tropism in the parotid gland utilizing membrane-tomato floxed membrane-GFP transgenic mice to screen CRE recombinase encoding AAV vectors of different clades to rapidly identify capsid isolates able to transduce salivary gland acinar cells. We determined that AAVRh10 and a novel isolate found as a contaminant of a laboratory stock of simian adenovirus SV15, AAV44.9, are both able to transduce parotid and sublingual acinar cells. Persistence and localization of transduction of these AAVs were tested using vectors encoding firefly luciferase, which was detected 6 months after vector administration. Most luciferase expression was localized to the salivary gland compared to that of distal organs. Transduction resulted in robust secretion of recombinant protein in both blood and saliva. Transduction was species specific, with AAVRh10 having stronger transduction activity in rats compared with AAV44.9 or AAV2 but weaker in human primary salivary gland cells. This work demonstrates efficient transduction of parotid acinar cells by AAV that resulted in secretion of recombinant protein in both serum and saliva. American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy 2020-10-14 /pmc/articles/PMC7689275/ /pubmed/33294494 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.omtm.2020.10.006 Text en © 2020 The Authors http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Original Article
Di Pasquale, Giovanni
Perez Riveros, Paola
Tora, Muhibullah
Sheikh, Tayyab
Son, Aran
Teos, Leyla
Grewe, Brigitte
Swaim, William D.
Afione, Sandra
Zheng, Changyu
Jang, Shyh-Ing
Shitara, Akiko
Alevizos, Ilias
Weigert, Roberto
Chiorini, John A.
Transduction of Salivary Gland Acinar Cells with a Novel AAV Vector 44.9
title Transduction of Salivary Gland Acinar Cells with a Novel AAV Vector 44.9
title_full Transduction of Salivary Gland Acinar Cells with a Novel AAV Vector 44.9
title_fullStr Transduction of Salivary Gland Acinar Cells with a Novel AAV Vector 44.9
title_full_unstemmed Transduction of Salivary Gland Acinar Cells with a Novel AAV Vector 44.9
title_short Transduction of Salivary Gland Acinar Cells with a Novel AAV Vector 44.9
title_sort transduction of salivary gland acinar cells with a novel aav vector 44.9
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7689275/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33294494
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.omtm.2020.10.006
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