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Innate Functions of Immunoglobulin M Lessen Liver Gene Transfer with Helper-Dependent Adenovirus
Authors:Carmen Unzu  Ignacio Melero  Aizea Morales-Kastresana  Ana Sampedro  Irantzu Serrano-Mendioroz  Arantza Azpilikueta  María Carmen Ochoa  Juan Dubrot  Eduardo Martínez-Ansó   Antonio Fontanellas
Affiliation:1. Gene Therapy and Hepatology Area, Centre for Applied Medical Research (CIMA), University of Navarra, Pamplona, Spain.; 2. Department of Pathology and Immunology, University of Geneva Medical School, Geneva, Switzerland.; Mayo Clinic, United States of America,
Abstract:The immune system poses obstacles to viral vectors, even in the first administration to preimmunized hosts. We have observed that the livers of B cell-deficient mice were more effectively transduced by a helper-dependent adenovirus serotype-5 (HDA) vector than those of WT mice. This effect was T-cell independent as shown in athymic mice. Passive transfer of the serum from adenovirus-naïve WT to Rag1KO mice resulted in a reduction in gene transfer that was traced to IgM purified from serum of adenovirus-naïve mice. To ascribe the gene transfer inhibition activity to either adenoviral antigen-specific or antigen-unspecific functions of IgM, we used a monoclonal IgM antibody of unrelated specificity. Both the polyclonal and the irrelevant monoclonal IgM inhibited gene transfer by the HDA vector to either cultured hepatocellular carcinoma cells or to the liver of mice in vivo. Adsorption of polyclonal or monoclonal IgMs to viral capsids was revealed by ELISAs on adenovirus-coated plates. These observations indicate the existence of an inborn IgM mechanism deployed against a prevalent virus to reduce early post-infection viremia. In conclusion, innate IgM binding to adenovirus serotype-5 capsids restrains gene-transfer and offers a mechanism to be targeted for optimization of vector dosage in gene therapy with HDA vectors.
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