Publicaciones científicas

Helper-dependent adenoviral liver gene therapy protects against induced attacks and corrects protein folding stress in acute intermittent porphyria mice

15-jul-2013 | Revista: Human Molecular Genetics

Carmen Unzu 1, Ana Sampedro, Itsaso Mauleón, Manuela González-Aparicio, Rafael Enríquez de Salamanca, Jesús Prieto, Tomás Aragón, Antonio Fontanellas


Abstract

Acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) is a hepatic metabolic disease that results from haplo-insufficient activity of porphobilinogen deaminase (PBGD). The dominant clinical feature is acute intermittent attacks when hepatic heme synthesis is activated by endocrine or exogenous factors. Gene therapy vectors over-expressing PBGD protein in the liver offers potential as a cure for AIP. Here, we developed a helper-dependent adenovirus (HDA) encoding human PBGD (hPBGD) and assessed its therapeutic efficacy in a murine model of AIP. Intravenous or intrahepatic administration of HDA-hPBGD to AIP mice resulted in a sustained hepatic hPBGD expression in a dose-dependent manner. Intrahepatic administration conveyed full protection against induced porphyria attacks at a significantly lower viral dose than intravenous injection. Transgenic hPBGD accumulated only in the cytosol of hepatocytes as the endogenous protein. Characterization of PBGD-deficient mouse strains revealed that a strong PBGD deficiency causes the chronic disturbance of cytosolic and endoplasmic reticulum folding machineries. This disturbance was completely restored over time by the over-expression of hPBGD. HDA-hPBGD is a promising vector that protects against porphyria attacks and resolves the chronic folding stress associated with low levels of PBGD activity.

CITA DEL ARTÍCULO Hum Mol Genet. 2013 Jul 15;22(14):2929-40. doi: 10.1093/hmg/ddt148. Epub 2013 Apr 5.