TY - JOUR
T1 - Modulation of renal glomerular disease using remote delivery of adenoviral-encoded soluble type II TGF-β receptor fusion molecule
AU - Haviv, Yosef S.
AU - Takayama, Koichi
AU - Nagi, Peter A.
AU - Tousson, Albert
AU - Cook, William
AU - Wang, Minghui
AU - Lam, John T.
AU - Naito, Seiji
AU - Lei, Xiaosheng
AU - Carey, Delicia E.
AU - Curiel, David T.
PY - 2003/10
Y1 - 2003/10
N2 - Background: Systemic adenoviral (Ad) gene therapy for renal disorders is largely hampered by the unique architecture of the kidney. Consequently, currently available Ad vectors are of only limited therapeutic utility in the context of glomerular and fibroproliferative renal diseases. Methods: The Ad vectors studied in the context of blocking renal fibrosis were AdTβ-ExR and AdCATβ-TR. AdTβ-ExR encodes a chimeric soluble molecule comprising the entire ectodomain of the human type II TGF-β receptor, genetically fused to the Fc fragment of the human IgG1 (sTβRII), while AdCATβ-TR encodes only the dominant-negative truncated ectodomain of the human type II TGF-β receptor. The biologic activity of the type II TGF-β receptor was evaluated in vitro by its ability to inhibit cellular proliferation and in vivo in a unilateral ureter obstruction fibrosis model. Renal targeting with sTβRII was evaluated immunohistochemically after intramuscular (IM) delivery of AdTβ-ExR. The renal antifibrotic effect of the Ad vectors was evaluated in a lupus murine model with both light and electron microscopy and urinalysis. Results: sTβRII was detected in the glomeruli after remote IM injection of AdTβ-ExR, but not the control AdCATβ-TR, indicating renal deposition of the heterologous soluble fusion protein after its expression in the muscle and secretion into the circulation. AdTβ-ExR, but not AdCATβ-TR, could transiently inhibit mesangial expansion, glomerular hypercellularity, proteinuria and cortical interstitial fibrosis in a murine lupus model. However, the autoimmune renal disease eventually surpassed the antifibrotic effect. Conclusions: These results indicate the superiority of a soluble type II TGF-β receptor over a dominant-negative, non-soluble type II TGF-β receptor in the context of blocking renal fibrosis in murine models.
AB - Background: Systemic adenoviral (Ad) gene therapy for renal disorders is largely hampered by the unique architecture of the kidney. Consequently, currently available Ad vectors are of only limited therapeutic utility in the context of glomerular and fibroproliferative renal diseases. Methods: The Ad vectors studied in the context of blocking renal fibrosis were AdTβ-ExR and AdCATβ-TR. AdTβ-ExR encodes a chimeric soluble molecule comprising the entire ectodomain of the human type II TGF-β receptor, genetically fused to the Fc fragment of the human IgG1 (sTβRII), while AdCATβ-TR encodes only the dominant-negative truncated ectodomain of the human type II TGF-β receptor. The biologic activity of the type II TGF-β receptor was evaluated in vitro by its ability to inhibit cellular proliferation and in vivo in a unilateral ureter obstruction fibrosis model. Renal targeting with sTβRII was evaluated immunohistochemically after intramuscular (IM) delivery of AdTβ-ExR. The renal antifibrotic effect of the Ad vectors was evaluated in a lupus murine model with both light and electron microscopy and urinalysis. Results: sTβRII was detected in the glomeruli after remote IM injection of AdTβ-ExR, but not the control AdCATβ-TR, indicating renal deposition of the heterologous soluble fusion protein after its expression in the muscle and secretion into the circulation. AdTβ-ExR, but not AdCATβ-TR, could transiently inhibit mesangial expansion, glomerular hypercellularity, proteinuria and cortical interstitial fibrosis in a murine lupus model. However, the autoimmune renal disease eventually surpassed the antifibrotic effect. Conclusions: These results indicate the superiority of a soluble type II TGF-β receptor over a dominant-negative, non-soluble type II TGF-β receptor in the context of blocking renal fibrosis in murine models.
KW - Adenovirus
KW - Experimental glomerulonephritis
KW - Gene therapy
KW - Renal fibrosis
KW - Transforming growth factor-β receptor type II
KW - Unilateral ureter obstruction
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=3042824190&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/jgm.428
DO - 10.1002/jgm.428
M3 - Article
C2 - 14533192
AN - SCOPUS:3042824190
VL - 5
SP - 839
EP - 851
JO - Journal of Gene Medicine
JF - Journal of Gene Medicine
SN - 1099-498X
IS - 10
ER -