| Literature DB >> 30860398 |
Robert Allen Kaiser1,2, Clara Teresa Nicolas2, Kari Lynn Allen2, Jennifer Anne Chilton3, Zeji Du2, Raymond Daniel Hickey2, Joseph Benjamin Lillegard1,2,4.
Abstract
General safety and toxicology assessments supporting in vivo lentiviral vector-based therapeutic development are sparse. We have previously demonstrated the efficacy of a lentiviral vector expressing fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase (LV-FAH) to cure animal models of hereditary tyrosinemia type 1. Therefore, we performed a complete preclinical toxicological evaluation of LV-FAH, in a large cohort (n = 20/group) of wildtype mice and included matched groups of N-nitrosodiethylamine/carbon tetrachloride (DEN/CCl4)-induced liver injury mice to assess specific toxicity in fibrotic liver tissue. Mice receiving LV-FAH alone (109 TU/mouse) or in combination with DEN/CCl4 presented clinically similar to control animals, with only slight reductions in total body weight gains over the study period (3.2- to 3.7-fold vs. 4.2-fold). There were no indications of toxicity attributed to administration of LV-FAH alone over the duration of this study. The known hepatotoxic combination of DEN/CCl4 induced fibrotic liver injury, and co-administration with LV-FAH was associated with exaggeration of some findings such as an increased liver:body weight ratio and progression to focal hepatocyte necrosis in some animals. Hepatocellular degeneration/regeneration was present in DEN/CCl4-dosed animals regardless of LV-FAH as evaluated by Ki-67 immunohistochemistry and circulating alpha fetoprotein levels, but there were no tumors identified in any tissue in any dose group. These data demonstrate the inherent safety of LV-FAH and support broader clinical development of lentiviral vectors for in vivo administration.Entities:
Keywords: gene therapy; hereditary tyrosinemia type 1; lentiviral vectors; toxicology; tumorigenicity
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30860398 PMCID: PMC6589498 DOI: 10.1089/humc.2018.249
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Gene Ther Clin Dev ISSN: 2324-8637 Impact factor: 5.032