EHV-1 vectors

Chemistry: molecular biology and microbiology – Virus or bacteriophage – except for viral vector or...

Reexamination Certificate

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C435S236000, C435S320100

Reexamination Certificate

active

06387685

ABSTRACT:

The invention relates to a method of virus manipulation; means therefor and products thereof which have particular, but not exclusive, application in gene therapy/vaccine development.
Human gene therapy virus vectors constructed to date are derived from adenovirus, retrovirus, parvovirus and herpesvirus families. With the exception of retroviruses, all have been derived from viruses originally isolated from humans. In nearly every case the vectors used in both ex and in vivo work have been derived from virus mutants originally created to study gene function, rather than to act as gene delivery systems. A virus-derived vector capable of efficient gene delivery to human epithelial mucosal cells would have a wide range of uses in human gene therapy, for example delivery of a correct copy of the cystic fibrosis trans-membrane regulator protein to the lung or a range of human tumour suppressor genes to tumours of the lung and colon or additionally as a vaccine delivery vehicle to induce muscosal immunity.
Although adenoviruses have proved to be popular because of ease of growth of stocks to high titre, they have many problems, as viruses which are replication incompetent in cell culture have caused tissue damage and respiratory disease in patients treated with such vectors (1,2). Furthermore, adenovirus vectors with further gene deletions to express proteins are in development, but these grow less well in culture than the original E1A (a gene essential for adenovirus replication in tissue culture) deletion mutants (3), which suggests production problems in the longer term. The compact nature of the adenovirus genome, in which many of the early regulatory genes are components of overlapping gene clusters, which are differentially spliced, makes it difficult to delete the coding region of single transcripts (4). Furthermore, adenoviruses have a packaging constraint which prevents the introduction of heterologous DNA sequences >8Kbp. One of the biggest problems with adenoviruses resides in the lack of information on virus gene function in pathogenesis (5). It is very difficult to predict, at present, which genes might be deleted in order to create a completely replication defective virus in vivo. In addition, one of the major structural components of adenoviruses, the fibre, responsible for cell attachment, can itself cause a cytopathic effect (6).
Retrovirus vectors have, for the most part, been derived from murine viruses which have a broad host range (amphotropic). This group of virus vectors has been the most extensively developed, mainly because they fulfill many of the simplistic criteria needed in a vector for gene therapy. They can be made totally replication incompetent, integrate into host cell chromosomes and are inherited in a dividing cell population. Theoretically, this random chromosomal integration may have pathological consequences. Their major disadvantage is that they have a limited packaging capacity and only vectors being developed from HIV have the potential to infect and integrate their genetic material into post-mitotic cells. Furthermore, these vectors have to be produced through DNA transfection (7), and high titre stocks are, at present, impossible to produce.
Parvovirus vectors have some of the same advantages as retroviruses through their ability to integrate into chromosomes and thus the transferred gene may be inherited in daughter cells (8). Their main disadvantage is that it is impossible to produce high titre stocks and the genome has a packaging capacity which is significantly less than that of retroviruses (9).
Herpesvirus vector development to date has concentrated on derivatives of the common human pathogen herpes simplex virus (HSV). The advantage of using this virus is that it is the most intensively studied of all the herpesviruses. The sequence of the virus genome has been determined, there is a wide range of well characterised virus mutants available and transcriptional control processes are well understood. In addition, pathogenicity of the virus and the host immune response have been intensively studied for many years. It is clear, however that although it is possible to delete genes encoding proteins involved in neuropathogenicity (10) and immediate-early transcriptional activators, (11) or to inactivate the virion-associated activator of immediate-early genes (12), such mutant viruses are difficult to produce as high titre stocks and in some cases have an unacceptable reversion frequency, through their propagation in helper cell lines (11). Encouraging results have been obtained with neuronal expression of heterologous genes in animal models, and it is likely that further disabled vectors will be derived (13, 14, 15). The likely problem with HSV vectors is the innate immune response present in the majority of the population; we would predict that HSV vectors will suffer the same problem as those derived from human adenoviruses, when delivered to an immunologically competent site.
Other herpesviruses might be more appropriate to develop as vectors for human tissues. For example one might use the &agr;-herpesviruses. This group consists of a large number of viruses probably equal to a multiple of the number of susceptible species given that typically 2-3 viruses infect each of the known susceptible species. Thus &agr;-herpesviruses have long been known to have a very broad cell tropism. For instance, HSV can infect and replicate in cells derived from species as diverse as
bovidae
and
muridae
. Certain viruses from these, species can, conversely, infect human cells. It is apparent that failure in the replication of viruses infecting cells of a different species than the usual host is often due to transcriptional blocks (16).
This might therefore offer an immediate advantage in the development of a gene therapy vector. An appropriate virus might be chosen which naturally cannot replicate in human cells, but is able to deliver nucleic acid to the cell in an efficient manner.
EHV-1 is naturally a respiratory pathogen of horses (17). It also has the capability of causing abortion in pregnant mares. The virus replicates readily in cells from a wide variety of species including hamster, mouse and rabbit. In addition, we have now shown that the virus is able to replicate in human and primate cells.
We have, serendipitously, chosen this virus for inter-species gene therapy despite the large number of possible candidates and the prevailing convention of using intra-species viruses for gene therapy.
EHV-1 has been chosen as although we have shown the virus is capable of infecting human cells (18) of different lineages in vitro, it does not appear to infect humans in vivo. Surveys have been carried out in populations of potentially susceptible individuals, yet there is no evidence of any transmission of this virus to humans (17). No seroconversion of a human has ever been reported. As this virus is a respiratory pathogen it offers the potential of being able to deliver genes to the respiratory tract as well as other mucosal surfaces of humans.
EHV-1 is, as far as can be ascertained, apathogenic for man. There are no published studies regarding seroconvertion for humans whilst working with the virus, and workers in the field who have looked for a specific anti-EHV-1 response have not been able to detect any evidence that the virus replicates in human tissues studied. There is a well-established animal model for studying respiratory disease caused by EHV-1. Mice are dosed with suspensions of virus intranasally, subsequent to which they develop a transient febrile respiratory disease, during which time virus may be detected in lung tissue. It has already been shown that deletion of certain genes, non-essential for replication in tissue culture make the virus essentially apathogenic in mice. The ability to create a gene delivery vehicle which is not a human pathogen, unable to replicate in vivo but able to infect respiratory and other mucosal epithelium is obviously attractive, as the viruses developed to date for such purposes either have to be inj

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