Adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors have been successfully exploited in gene therapy applications for the treatment of several genetic disorders. AAV is considered an episomal vector, but it has been shown to integrate within the host cell genome after the generation of double-strand DNA breaks or nicks. Although AAV integration raises some safety concerns, it can also provide therapeutic benefit; the direct intrathymic injection of an AAV harboring a therapeutic transgene results in integration in T-cell progenitors and long-term T-cell immunity. To assess the mechanisms of AAV integration, we retrieved and analyzed hundreds of AAV integration sites from lymph node-derived mature T cells and compared these with liver and brain tissue from treated mice. Notably, we found that although AAV integrations in the liver and brain were distributed across the entire mouse genome, >90% of the integrations in T cells were clustered within the T-cell receptor α, β, and γ genes. More precisely, the insertion mapped to DNA breaks created by the enzymatic activity of recombination activating genes (RAGs) during variable, diversity, and joining recombination. Our data indicate that RAG activity during T-cell receptor maturation induces a site-specific integration of AAV genomes and opens new therapeutic avenues for achieving long-term AAV-mediated gene transfer in dividing cells.

Calabria, A., Cipriani, C., Spinozzi, G., Rudilosso, L., Esposito, S., Benedicenti, F., et al. (2023). Intrathymic AAV delivery results in therapeutic site-specific integration at TCR loci in mice. BLOOD, 141(19), 2316-2329 [10.1182/blood.2022017378].

Intrathymic AAV delivery results in therapeutic site-specific integration at TCR loci in mice

Spinozzi G.;
2023

Abstract

Adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors have been successfully exploited in gene therapy applications for the treatment of several genetic disorders. AAV is considered an episomal vector, but it has been shown to integrate within the host cell genome after the generation of double-strand DNA breaks or nicks. Although AAV integration raises some safety concerns, it can also provide therapeutic benefit; the direct intrathymic injection of an AAV harboring a therapeutic transgene results in integration in T-cell progenitors and long-term T-cell immunity. To assess the mechanisms of AAV integration, we retrieved and analyzed hundreds of AAV integration sites from lymph node-derived mature T cells and compared these with liver and brain tissue from treated mice. Notably, we found that although AAV integrations in the liver and brain were distributed across the entire mouse genome, >90% of the integrations in T cells were clustered within the T-cell receptor α, β, and γ genes. More precisely, the insertion mapped to DNA breaks created by the enzymatic activity of recombination activating genes (RAGs) during variable, diversity, and joining recombination. Our data indicate that RAG activity during T-cell receptor maturation induces a site-specific integration of AAV genomes and opens new therapeutic avenues for achieving long-term AAV-mediated gene transfer in dividing cells.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Animals; Dependovirus; Genetic Therapy; Genetic Vectors; Mice; Plasmids; Receptors, Antigen, T-Cell; Transgenes; Virus Integration
English
11-mag-2023
2023
141
19
2316
2329
none
Calabria, A., Cipriani, C., Spinozzi, G., Rudilosso, L., Esposito, S., Benedicenti, F., et al. (2023). Intrathymic AAV delivery results in therapeutic site-specific integration at TCR loci in mice. BLOOD, 141(19), 2316-2329 [10.1182/blood.2022017378].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/529920
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