Article

Immunogenicity of intrathecal plasmid gene delivery: cytokine release and effects on transgene expression.

Department of Molecular, Cellular and Developmental Biology, University of CO, Boulder, CO, USA.
The Journal of Gene Medicine (impact factor: 2.48). 06/2009; 11(9):782-90. DOI:10.1002/jgm.1364 pp.782-90
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT One method for the delivery of therapeutic proteins to the spinal cord is to inject nonviral gene vectors including plasmid DNA into the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) that surrounds the spinal cord (intrathecal space). This approach has produced therapeutic benefits in animal models of disease and several months of protein expression; however, there is little information available on the immune response to these treatments in the intrathecal space, the relevance of plasmid CpG sequences to any plasmid-induced immune response, or the effect of this immune response on transgene expression.
In the present study, coding or noncoding plasmids were delivered to the intrathecal space of the lumbar spinal region in rats. Lumbosacral CSF was then collected at various time points afterwards for monitoring of cytokines and transgene expression.
This work demonstrates, for the first time, increased tumor necrosis factor-alpha and interleukin-1 in response to intrathecal plasmid vector injection and provides evidence indicating that this response is largely absent in a CpG-depleted vector. Transgene expression in the CSF is not significantly affected by this immune response. Expression after intrathecal plasmid injection is variable across rats but correlates with the amount of tissue associated plasmid and is increased by disrupting normal CSF flow.
The data obtained in the present study indicate that plasmid immunogenicity may affect intrathecal plasmid gene therapy safety but not transgene expression in the CSF. Furthermore, the development of methods to prevent loss of plasmid via CSF flow out of the central nervous system through the injection hole and/or natural outflow routes may increase intrathecal plasmid gene delivery efficacy.

0 0
 · 
0 Bookmarks
 · 
28 Views

Keywords

central nervous system
 
cerebrospinal fluid
 
CSF flow
 
injection hole
 
intrathecal plasmid injection
 
intrathecal plasmid vector injection
 
lumbar spinal region
 
Lumbosacral CSF
 
natural outflow routes
 
nonviral gene vectors
 
normal CSF flow
 
plasmid CpG sequences
 
plasmid DNA
 
plasmid immunogenicity
 
plasmid-induced immune response
 
protein expression
 
therapeutic proteins
 
transgene expression
 
tumor necrosis factor-alpha
 
various time points