Prevention of hepatitis C virus infection by adoptive allogeneic immunotherapy using suicide gene-modified lymphocytes: an in vitro proof-of-concept

Affiliation auteurs!!!! Error affiliation !!!!
TitrePrevention of hepatitis C virus infection by adoptive allogeneic immunotherapy using suicide gene-modified lymphocytes: an in vitro proof-of-concept
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2015
AuteursLeboeuf C., Roser-Schilder J., Lambotin M., Durand S., Wu T., Fauvelle C., Su B., Bole-Richard E., Deschamps M., Ferrand C., Tiberghien P., Pessaux P., Baumert T.F, Robinet E.
JournalGENE THERAPY
Volume22
Pagination172-180
Date PublishedFEB
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0969-7128
Résumé

Hepatitis C virus (HCV)-induced, end-stage liver disease is a major indication for liver transplantation, but systematic graft reinfection accelerates liver disease recurrence. Transplantation recipients may be ineligible for direct-acting antivirals, owing to toxicity, resistance or advanced liver disease. Adoptive immunotherapy with liver graft-derived, ex vivo-activated lymphocytes was previously shown to prevent HCV-induced graft reinfections. Alternatively, the applicability and therapeutic efficacy of adoptive immunotherapy may be enhanced by `ready for use' suicide gene-modified lymphocytes from healthy blood donors; moreover, conditional, prodrug-induced cell suicide may prevent potential side effects. Here, we demonstrate that allogeneic suicide gene-modified lymphocytes (SGMLs) could potently, dose-and time-dependently, inhibit viral replication. The effect occurs at effector: target cell ratios that exhibits no concomitant cytotoxicity toward virus-infected target cells. The effect, mediated mostly by CD56+ lymphocytes, is interleukin-2-dependent, IFN-gamma-mediated and, importantly, resistant to calcineurin inhibitors. Thus, post-transplant immunosuppression may not interfere with this adoptive cell immunotherapy approach. Furthermore, these cells are indeed amenable to conditional cell suicide; in particular, the inducible caspase 9 suicide gene is superior to the herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase suicide gene. Our data provide in vitro proof-of-concept that allogeneic, third-party, SGMLs may prevent HCV-induced liver graft reinfection.

DOI10.1038/gt.2014.99