| Literature DB >> 26015970 |
Aurélie Moreau1, Céline Vandamme2, Mercedes Segovia1, Marie Devaux2, Mickaël Guilbaud2, Gaëlle Tilly1, Nicolas Jaulin2, Johanne Le Duff2, Yan Cherel3, Jack-Yves Deschamps3, Ignacio Anegon1, Philippe Moullier4, Maria Cristina Cuturi1, Oumeya Adjali2.
Abstract
Preventing untoward immune responses against a specific antigen is a major challenge in different clinical settings such as gene therapy, transplantation, or autoimmunity. Following intramuscular delivery of recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV)-derived vectors, transgene rejection can be a roadblock to successful clinical translation. Specific immunomodulation strategies potentially leading to sustained transgene expression while minimizing pharmacological immunosuppression are desirable. Tolerogenic dendritic cells (TolDC) are potential candidates but have not yet been evaluated in the context of gene therapy, to our knowledge. Following intramuscular delivery of rAAV-derived vectors expressing an immunogenic protein in the nonhuman primate model, we assessed the immunomodulating potential of autologous bone marrow-derived TolDC generated in the presence of IL10 and pulsed with the transgene product. TolDC administered either intradermally or intravenously were safe and well tolerated. While the intravenous route showed a modest ability to modulate host immunity against the transgene product, intradermally delivery resulted in a robust vaccination of the macaques when associated to intramuscular rAAV-derived vectors-based gene transfer. These findings demonstrate the critical role of TolDC mode of injection in modulating host immunity. This study also provides the first evidence of the potential of TolDC-based immunomodulation in gene therapy.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 26015970 PMCID: PMC4420248 DOI: 10.1038/mtm.2014.28
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ther Methods Clin Dev ISSN: 2329-0501 Impact factor: 6.698