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Phenotypic correction of ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency using low dose helper-dependent adenoviral vectors

✍ Scribed by Nicola Brunetti-Pierri; Christian Clarke; Viraj Mane; Donna J. Palmer; Brendan Lanpher; Qin Sun; William O'Brien; Brendan Lee


Book ID
102338733
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2008
Tongue
English
Weight
270 KB
Volume
10
Category
Article
ISSN
1099-498X

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Background

Helper‐dependent adenoviral vectors (HDAd) can mediate long‐term phenotypic correction in the ornithine transacarbamylase (OTC)‐deficient mice model with negligible chronic toxicity. However, the high doses required for metabolic correction will result in systemic inflammatory response syndrome in humans. This acute toxicity represents the major obstacle for clinical applications of HDAd vectors for the treatment of OTC deficiency. Strategies for reducing the dose necessary for disease correction are highly desirable because HDAd acute toxicity is clearly dose‐dependent.

Methods

We analysed a potent expression cassette and the hydrodynamic injection for the ability to reduce the HDAd dose necessary for phenotypic correction in OTC‐deficient spf‐ash mice.

Results

We have developed a vector containing a potent expression cassette expressing the OTC transgene, which allowed phenotypic correction at lower doses. Our results suggest that vector expressing greater OTC levels allows correction of orotic acid overproduction at lower doses that make clinical translation more relevant. We were able to further reduce the minimal effective dose by delivering the vector through the hydrodynamic injection technique.

Conclusions

Vectors containing the expression cassette used in the present study, combined with other strategies for improving HDAd therapeutic index, will likely permit application of these vectors for the treatment of OTC deficiency as well as other urea cycle disorders. Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.