Human interleukin-10 delivered intrathecally by self-complementary adeno-associated virus 8 induces xenogeneic transgene immunity without clinical neurotoxicity in swine.

JOURNAL OF GENE MEDICINE(2018)

引用 0|浏览17
暂无评分
摘要
IntroductionIntrathecal interleukin (IL)-10 delivered by plasmid or viral gene vectors has been proposed for clinical testing because it is effective for chronic pain in rodents, is a potential therapeutic for various human diseases, and was found to be nontoxic in dogs, when the human IL-10 ortholog was tested. However, recent studies in swine testing porcine IL-10 demonstrated fatal neurotoxicity. The present study aimed to deliver vector-encoded human IL-10 in swine, measure expression of the transgene in cerebrospinal fluid and monitor animals for signs of neurotoxicity. ResultsHuman IL-10 levels peaked 2weeks after vector administration followed by a rapid decline that occurred concomitant with the emergence of anti-human IL-10 antibodies in the cerebrospinal fluid and serum. Animals remained neurologically healthy throughout the study period. ConclusionsThe findings of the present study suggest that swine are not idiosyncratically sensitive to intrathecal IL-10 because, recapitulating previous reports in dogs, they suffered no clinical neurotoxicity from the human ortholog. These results strongly infer that toxicity of intrathecal IL-10 in large animal models was previously overlooked because of a species mismatch between transgene and host. The present study further suggests that swine were protected from interleukin-10 by a humoral immune response against the xenogeneic cytokine. Future safety studies of IL-10 or related therapeutics may require syngeneic large animal models.
更多
查看译文
关键词
adeno-associated virus vector,animal model,interleukin-10,intrathecal,swine,xenogeneic
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要