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    Date Issued2011 (1)2010 (1)AuthorFlotte, Terence R. (2)
    Thomas, Darby L. (2)
    Auricchio, Alberto (1)Ayuso, Eduard (1)Beecham, E. Jeffrey (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Pediatrics (2)Gene Therapy Center (2)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordAllergy and Immunology (2)Genetics and Genomics (2)Pediatrics (2)*Dependovirus (1)*Genetic Vectors (1)View MoreJournalHuman gene therapy (2)

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    Preclinical evaluation of a recombinant adeno-associated virus vector expressing human alpha-1 antitrypsin made using a recombinant herpes simplex virus production method

    Chulay, Jeffrey D.; Ye, Guo-Jie; Thomas, Darby L.; Knop, David R.; Benson, Janet M.; Hutt, Julie A.; Wang, Gensheng; Humphries, Margaret; Flotte, Terence R. (2011-02-17)
    Recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV) vectors offer promise for gene therapy of alpha-1 antitrypsin (AAT) deficiency. A toxicology study in mice evaluated intramuscular injection of an rAAV vector expressing human AAT (rAAV-CB-hAAT) produced using a herpes simplex virus (HSV) complementation system or a plasmid transfection (TFX) method at doses of 3 x 10(11) vg (1.2 x 10(13) vg/kg) for both vectors and 2 x 10(12) vg (8 x 10(13) vg/kg) for the HSV-produced vector. The HSV-produced vector had favorable in vitro characteristics in terms of purity, efficiency of transduction, and hAAT expression. There were no significant differences in clinical findings or hematology and clinical chemistry values between test article and control groups and no gross pathology findings. Histopathological examination demonstrated minimal to mild changes in skeletal muscle at the injection site, consisting of focal chronic interstitial inflammation and muscle degeneration, regeneration, and vacuolization, in vector-injected animals. At the 3 x 10(11) vg dose, serum hAAT levels were higher with the HSV-produced vector than with the TFX-produced vector. With the higher dose of HSV-produced vector, the increase in serum hAAT levels was dose-proportional in females and greater than dose-proportional in males. Vector copy numbers in blood were highest 24 hr after dosing and declined thereafter, with no detectable copies present 90 days after dosing. Antibodies to hAAT were detected in almost all vector-treated animals, and antibodies to HSV were detected in most animals that received the highest vector dose. These results support continued development of rAAV-CB-hAAT for treatment of AAT deficiency.
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    Characterization of a recombinant adeno-associated virus type 2 Reference Standard Material

    Lock, Martin; McGorray, Susan; Auricchio, Alberto; Ayuso, Eduard; Beecham, E. Jeffrey; Blouin-Tavel, Veronique; Bosch, Fatima; Bose, Mahuya; Bryne, Barry J.; Caton, Tina; et al. (2010-10-14)
    A recombinant adeno-associated virus serotype 2 Reference Standard Material (rAAV2 RSM) has been produced and characterized with the purpose of providing a reference standard for particle titer, vector genome titer, and infectious titer for AAV2 gene transfer vectors. Production and purification of the reference material were carried out by helper virus-free transient transfection and chromatographic purification. The purified bulk material was vialed, confirmed negative for microbial contamination, and then distributed for characterization along with standard assay protocols and assay reagents to 16 laboratories worldwide. Using statistical transformation and modeling of the raw data, mean titers and confidence intervals were determined for capsid particles ({X}, 9.18 x 10(1)(1) particles/ml; 95% confidence interval [CI], 7.89 x 10(1)(1) to 1.05 x 10(1)(2) particles/ml), vector genomes ({X}, 3.28 x 10(1) vector genomes/ml; 95% CI, 2.70 x 10(1) to 4.75 x 10(1) vector genomes/ml), transducing units ({X}, 5.09 x 10 transducing units/ml; 95% CI, 2.00 x 10 to 9.60 x 10 transducing units/ml), and infectious units ({X}, 4.37 x 10 TCID IU/ml; 95% CI, 2.06 x 10 to 9.26 x 10 TCID IU/ml). Further analysis confirmed the identity of the reference material as AAV2 and the purity relative to nonvector proteins as greater than 94%. One obvious trend in the quantitative data was the degree of variation between institutions for each assay despite the relatively tight correlation of assay results within an institution. This relatively poor degree of interlaboratory precision and accuracy was apparent even though attempts were made to standardize the assays by providing detailed protocols and common reagents. This is the first time that such variation between laboratories has been thoroughly documented and the findings emphasize the need in the field for universal reference standards. The rAAV2 RSM has been deposited with the American Type Culture Collection and is available to the scientific community to calibrate laboratory-specific internal titer standards. Anticipated uses of the rAAV2 RSM are discussed.
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