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The Effect of Immunomodulatory Treatments on Anti-Dystrophin Immune Response After AAV Gene Therapy in Dystrophin Deficient mdx Mice. J Neuromuscul Dis 2021;8(s2):S325-S340

Date

09/28/2021

Pubmed ID

34569971

DOI

10.3233/JND-210706

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85120957320 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)   9 Citations

Abstract

BACKGROUND: AAV-based gene therapy is an attractive approach to treat Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) patients. Although the long-term consequences of a gene therapy approach for DMD are unknown, there is evidence in both DMD patients and animal models that dystrophin replacement by gene therapy leads to an anti-dystrophin immune response that is likely to limit the long-term use of these therapeutic strategies.

OBJECTIVE: Our objective is to test whether the anti-dystrophin immune response is affected by immunomodulatory drugs in mdx mice after rAAV gene therapy.

METHODS: mdx mice were treated with rAAV microdystrophin alone or in combination with immunomodulatory drugs. Dystrophin expression in skeletal muscle was assessed by mass spectrometry. Immune responses were assessed by immunophenotyping, western blot for anti-dystrophin antibodies and flow cytometry assays for antigen-specific T-cell cytokine expression. The impact on muscle was measured by grip strength assessment, in vivo torque, optical imaging for inflammation and H&E staining of sections to assess muscle damage.

RESULTS: We found that AAV-9-microdystrophin gene therapy induced expression of microdystrophin, anti-dystrophin antibodies, and T-cell cytokine responses. Immunomodulatory treatments, rituximab and VBP6 completely abrogated the anti-dystrophin antibody response. Prednisolone, CTLA4-Ig, and eplerenone showed variable efficacy in blocking the anti-dystrophin immune response. In contrast, none of the drugs completely abrogated the antigen specific IFN-γ response. AAV-microdystrophin treatment significantly reduced inflammation in both forelimbs and hindlimbs, and the addition of prednisolone and VBP6 further reduced muscle inflammation. Treatment with immunomodulatory drugs, except eplerenone, enhanced the beneficial effects of AAV-microdystrophin therapy in terms of force generation.

CONCLUSIONS: Our data suggest that AAV-microdystrophin treatment results in anti-dystrophin antibody and T-cell responses, and immunomodulatory treatments have variable efficacy on these responses.

Author List

Li N, Parkes JE, Spathis R, Morales M, Mcdonald J, Kendra RM, Ott EM, Brown KJ, Lawlor MW, Nagaraju K

Author

Michael W. Lawlor MD, PhD Adjunct Professor in the Pathology department at Medical College of Wisconsin




MESH terms used to index this publication - Major topics in bold

Animals
Dependovirus
Dystrophin
Gene Expression
Genetic Therapy
Genetic Vectors
Immunity
Mice
Mice, Inbred mdx
Muscle, Skeletal
Muscular Dystrophy, Animal
Muscular Dystrophy, Duchenne