Adeno-associated virus capable of expressing factor IX...

Chemistry: molecular biology and microbiology – Vector – per se

Reexamination Certificate

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C435S325000, C435S455000, C435S457000, C435S235100, C435S236000, C435S456000, C514S04400A, C424S093200, C424S093210

Reexamination Certificate

active

06670176

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to recombinant adeno-associated virus vectors for gene delivery and regulated tissue specific expression in at least one mammalian cell such that the expression of the gene is regulated in a tissue specific manner. The present invention also provides a method for using this adeno-associated virus vector for therapeutic purposes.
2. Brief Description of the Prior Art
It is well known that gene therapy of severe hemoglobinopathies requires high level regulated tissue specific expression of a transferred globin gene into hematopoietic stem cells and subsequent high level regulated tissue specific gene expression in maturing erythroid cells. In homozygous patients with such as for example, beta-thalassemia. deficient or absent beta-globin synthesis causes the production of poorly hemoglobinized-defective red cells resulting in severe anemia. Transfer and expression of a normal beta-globin gene, therefore, is highly effective in correcting the defect. In sickle cell anemia, the mutant hemoglobin is susceptible to polymerization resulting in altered red cell rheological and membrane properties leading to vaso-occlusion. An increase in production of one of the globin genes, fetal hemoglobin (hereinafter HbF), appears to ameliorate the severity of sickle cell disease. It will be understood by those skilled in the art that the regulated tissue specific production of normal globin gene products at normal levels in response to environmental stimuli in erythroid cells of a mammalian host with sickle cell anemia is therefore, therapeutic.
It is well known that most strategies for human gene therapy are based on the use of viral vectors for gene transfer. It has been shown that viral vectors capable of infecting virtually every cell in a target population are an efficient method of delivering nucleic acids into mammalian cells. Viral expression vectors have been developed using DNA viruses such as, for example, papovaviruses such as SV40, adenoviruses, herpes viruses, and poxviruses and RNA viruses, such as retroviruses. Generally, the most common used model vectors have been derived from murine and avian retroviruses. These retrovirus vectors utilize packaging cell lines which allow production of replication-defective vectors in the absence of wild-type retroviral helper. The defective retroviral vectors are able to infect and integrate into cells but cannot replicate. The ability to produce helper-free defective retrovirus using packaging cell lines protects against spread of the recombinant virus., and avoids possible dissemination,of recombinant virus-induced disease. It is known to use retroviral vectors to transfer the beta-globin gene into murine hematopoietic stem cells. Although the human beta-globin gene is expressed in most mammals, when transferred into murine hematopoietic stem cells it is only expressed to levels of about 1-2% of the mouse chromosomal beta-globin genes, a level too low to be of any therapeutic value. The disadvantage of the retrovirus packaging lines is that they have been shown to only produce low titers of virus or to produce high levels of wild-type retroviral helper. Another disadvantage is that while the retrovirus vectors can infect a broad class of cell types, cell replication and DNA synthesis are strictly required for provirus integration, therefore restricting efficient use of retroviral based vectors to replicating cells.
The recognition of human retroviruses over the past decade as the etiologic agent of Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (hereinafter AIDS) and in some cases T-cell and hairy cell leukemia have created an awareness of the health risks potentially associated with the use of retrovirus vectors.
It is known by those skilled in the art that retrovirus vectors have resulted in tumors in non-human primate studies as a result of contaminating wild-type retrovirus generated from the packaging cell line. This again points to the unavoidable risk inherent in the retrovirus packaging system.
It is well known that adeno-associated virus (hereinafter AAV) is a human defective, human dependent parvovirus. AAV requires coinfection with another virus such as for example, an adenovirus or certain members of the herpes virus family, for productive infection in cultured cells. In a lytic infection, AAV DNA replicates as a 4.7 kilobase double-stranded molecule and is packaged into virions as linear single-strands of both polarities with no preference as to polarity. It has been shown that in the absence of coinfection with a helper virus, the AAV genome integrates via its termini into the host genome in a site specific manner and resides there in a latent state until the cell is infected with helper virus. When the cell is infected with the helper virus, the AAV DNA is rescued, replicates and establishes a normal productive (lytic) infection.
The single-stranded DNA genome of the human virus AAV-2 (a serotype of AAV) is 4675 base pairs in length and is flanked by inverted terminal repeated sequences of 145 base pairs each. The first 125 nucleotides from a palindromic sequence can form a “T”-shaped hairpin secondary structure and exist in either of two orientations with respect to the genome, designated flip or flop. It has been suggested that AAV replicates according to which the terminal hairpin of AAV is used as a primer for the initiation of DNA replication. It has been shown that the AAV sequences that are required in cis for packaging, integration/rescue, and replication of viral DNA are located within a 191 base pair sequence that includes the terminal repeat sequences. The viral DNA sequence displays two major open reading frames, one in the left half and the other in the right half of the conventional AAV map. At least two regions which, when mutated give rise to phenotypically distinct viruses in the AAV genome. The rep region, which occupies the conventional left half of the genome, encodes proteins that are required for viral replication and for viral rescue when the viral genome is integrated. The cap region which occupies the conventional right half of the genome encodes AAV capsid proteins. Mutants within these three regions are capable of DNA replication but do not produce virus. It is known that AAV contains three transcriptional promoters—p5, p19, and p40. Four rep proteins (rep 78, 68, 52 and 40) and three capsid proteins (VP-1, VP-2 and VP-3) are derived from alternate splicing of the RNA transcripts of these promoters. These three promoters regulate expression of the genes required for replication and encapsidation of the AAV genome.
It has been shown that the majority of the cis-acting regulatory elements required for regulated tissue specific globin gene expression flank the globin gene cluster or reside within the gene themselves. The majority of these cis-acting regulatory elements have been defined by DNase I hypersensitive sites (hereinafter HS) and are collectively termed the locus control region (hereinafter LCR). Four sites (5′ HS I-IV) have been shown to be located several kilobases 5′ to the epsilon-globin gene and one site (3′ HS VI) has been shown to be mapped 3′ to the beta-globin gene. The active elements of the LCR are encompassed within 300-400 base pairs of DNA found at each hypersensitive site and some have been narrowed down to about 30 nucleotides. It is known that the 5′ HS II, III and IV when linked to globin genes singly or in combination, substantially enhanced and regulated globin gene expression to a maximum level equivalent to that of endogenous globin genes in transfected erythroleukemia cells or transgenic animals. The past efforts by others to develop retroviral vectors containing globin genes with regulatory elements needed to achieve high level expression have been unsuccessful. These retroviral vectors have been shown to have limited ability to transfer genes that result in regulated tissue specific expression into primate pluripotent hematopoietic stem cells which are a necessary targe

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