Quantification of human mature frataxin protein expression in nonhuman primate hearts after gene therapy.
Ian A BlairTeerapat RojsajjakulJuliette HordeauxGourav ChaudharyChristian HindererClementina MesarosJames M WilsonPublished in: Research square (2023)
Deficiency in human mature frataxin (hFXN-M) protein is responsible for the devastating neurodegenerative and cardiodegenerative disease of Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA). It results primarily by epigenetic silencing the FXN gene due to up to 1400 GAA triplet repeats in intron 1 of both alleles of the gene; a subset of approximately 3% of FRDA patients have a mutation on one allele. FRDA patients die most commonly in their 30s from heart disease. Therefore, increasing expression of heart hFXN-M using gene therapy offers a way to prevent early mortality in FRDA. We used rhesus macaque monkeys to test the pharmacology of an adeno-associated virus (AAV)hu68.CB7.hFXN therapy. The advantage of using non-human primates for hFXN-M gene therapy studies is that hFXN-M and monkey FXN-M (mFXN-M) are 98.5% identical, which limits potential immunologic side-effects. However, this presented a formidable bioanalytical challenge in quantification of proteins with almost identical sequences. This was overcome by development of a species-specific quantitative mass spectrometry-based method, which revealed for the first time, robust transgene-specific human protein expression in monkey heart tissue. The dose response was non-linear resulting in a ten-fold increase in monkey heart hFXN-M protein expression with only a three-fold increase in dose of the vector.
Keyphrases
- gene therapy
- endothelial cells
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- chronic kidney disease
- mass spectrometry
- heart failure
- newly diagnosed
- pluripotent stem cells
- dna methylation
- prognostic factors
- gene expression
- poor prognosis
- high resolution
- genome wide
- atrial fibrillation
- copy number
- type diabetes
- small molecule
- coronary artery disease
- patient reported outcomes
- early onset
- cell therapy
- simultaneous determination
- bone marrow
- high performance liquid chromatography
- quantum dots