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1.
J Paediatr Child Health ; 56(11): 1760-1768, 2020 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33197975

ABSTRACT

Neonatal liver disease encompasses many diagnoses, including structural and genetic aetiologies. Many have significant health implications requiring long-term specialist treatment including liver transplantation. Jaundice is a common presenting feature. The ability of health-care professionals to differentiate neonatal liver disease from benign diagnoses such as physiological jaundice is very important. Persistent (more than 2 weeks) of conjugated jaundice always warrants investigation. Severe unconjugated jaundice (requiring prolonged phototherapy) should also be promptly investigated. Recent advances in genomics have enabled previously elusive, precise diagnoses in some patients with neonatal liver disease. This review paper discusses the commoner causes, with a focus on early detection and need for referral to paediatric liver services.


Subject(s)
Cholestasis , Jaundice, Neonatal , Jaundice , Liver Diseases , Child , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Jaundice, Neonatal/diagnosis , Jaundice, Neonatal/etiology , Jaundice, Neonatal/therapy , Liver Diseases/diagnosis , Liver Diseases/etiology , Liver Diseases/therapy
2.
Hepatology ; 70(6): 2047-2061, 2019 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31099022

ABSTRACT

Recombinant adeno-associated viral (rAAV) vectors are highly promising vehicles for liver-targeted gene transfer, with therapeutic efficacy demonstrated in preclinical models and clinical trials. Progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 (PFIC3), an inherited juvenile-onset, cholestatic liver disease caused by homozygous mutation of the ABCB4 gene, may be a promising candidate for rAAV-mediated liver-targeted gene therapy. The Abcb4-/- mice model of PFIC3, with juvenile mice developing progressive cholestatic liver injury due to impaired biliary phosphatidylcholine excretion, resulted in cirrhosis and liver malignancy. Using a conventional rAAV strategy, we observed markedly blunted rAAV transduction in adult Abcb4-/- mice with established liver disease, but not in disease-free, wild-type adults or in homozygous juveniles prior to liver disease onset. However, delivery of predominantly nonintegrating rAAV vectors to juvenile mice results in loss of persistent transgene expression due to hepatocyte proliferation in the growing liver. Conclusion: A hybrid vector system, combining the high transduction efficiency of rAAV with piggyBac transposase-mediated somatic integration, was developed to facilitate stable human ABCB4 expression in vivo and to correct juvenile-onset chronic liver disease in a murine model of PFIC3. A single dose of hybrid vector at birth led to life-long restoration of bile composition, prevention of biliary cirrhosis, and a substantial reduction in tumorigenesis. This powerful hybrid rAAV-piggyBac transposon vector strategy has the capacity to mediate lifelong phenotype correction and reduce the tumorigenicity of progressive familial intrahepatic cholestasis type 3 and, with further refinement, the potential for human clinical translation.


Subject(s)
ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B/deficiency , Cholestasis, Intrahepatic/prevention & control , DNA Transposable Elements/genetics , Dependovirus/genetics , Genetic Therapy , Liver Neoplasms, Experimental/prevention & control , ATP Binding Cassette Transporter, Subfamily B/genetics , Animals , Humans , Male , Mice , Transduction, Genetic , ATP-Binding Cassette Sub-Family B Member 4
3.
PLoS Biol ; 16(9): e2005046, 2018 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30180168

ABSTRACT

The microenvironment of lymphoid organs can aid healthy immune function through provision of both structural and molecular support. In mice, fibroblastic reticular cells (FRCs) create an essential T-cell support structure within lymph nodes, while human FRCs are largely unstudied. Here, we show that FRCs create a regulatory checkpoint in human peripheral T-cell activation through 4 mechanisms simultaneously utilised. Human tonsil and lymph node-derived FRCs constrained the proliferation of both naïve and pre-activated T cells, skewing their differentiation away from a central memory T-cell phenotype. FRCs acted unilaterally without requiring T-cell feedback, imposing suppression via indoleamine-2,3-dioxygenase, adenosine 2A Receptor, prostaglandin E2, and transforming growth factor beta receptor (TGFßR). Each mechanistic pathway was druggable, and a cocktail of inhibitors, targeting all 4 mechanisms, entirely reversed the suppressive effect of FRCs. T cells were not permanently anergised by FRCs, and studies using chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells showed that immunotherapeutic T cells retained effector functions in the presence of FRCs. Since mice were not suitable as a proof-of-concept model, we instead developed a novel human tissue-based in situ assay. Human T cells stimulated using standard methods within fresh tonsil slices did not proliferate except in the presence of inhibitors described above. Collectively, we define a 4-part molecular mechanism by which FRCs regulate the T-cell response to strongly activating events in secondary lymphoid organs while permitting activated and CAR T cells to utilise effector functions. Our results define 4 feasible strategies, used alone or in combinations, to boost primary T-cell responses to infection or cancer by pharmacologically targeting FRCs.


Subject(s)
Cell Differentiation/immunology , Cellular Microenvironment , Lymph Nodes/immunology , Lymphocyte Activation/immunology , T-Lymphocytes/cytology , Adult , Cell Proliferation , Child , Fibroblasts/cytology , Humans , Immunologic Memory , Phenotype
4.
Hepatology ; 62(2): 417-28, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26011400

ABSTRACT

UNLABELLED: Liver-targeted gene therapy based on recombinant adeno-associated viral vectors (rAAV) shows promising therapeutic efficacy in animal models and adult-focused clinical trials. This promise, however, is not directly translatable to the growing liver, where high rates of hepatocellular proliferation are accompanied by loss of episomal rAAV genomes and subsequently a loss in therapeutic efficacy. We have developed a hybrid rAAV/piggyBac transposon vector system combining the highly efficient liver-targeting properties of rAAV with stable piggyBac-mediated transposition of the transgene into the hepatocyte genome. Transposition efficiency was first tested using an enhanced green fluorescent protein expression cassette following delivery to newborn wild-type mice, with a 20-fold increase in stably gene-modified hepatocytes observed 4 weeks posttreatment compared to traditional rAAV gene delivery. We next modeled the therapeutic potential of the system in the context of severe urea cycle defects. A single treatment in the perinatal period was sufficient to confer robust and stable phenotype correction in the ornithine transcarbamylase-deficient Spf(ash) mouse and the neonatal lethal argininosuccinate synthetase knockout mouse. Finally, transposon integration patterns were analyzed, revealing 127,386 unique integration sites which conformed to previously published piggyBac data. CONCLUSION: Using a hybrid rAAV/piggyBac transposon vector system, we achieved stable therapeutic protection in two urea cycle defect mouse models; a clinically conceivable early application of this technology in the management of severe urea cycle defects could be as a bridging therapy while awaiting liver transplantation; further improvement of the system will result from the development of highly human liver-tropic capsids, the use of alternative strategies to achieve transient transposase expression, and engineered refinements in the safety profile of piggyBac transposase-mediated integration.


Subject(s)
Adenoviridae/genetics , Genetic Therapy/methods , Genetic Vectors/pharmacology , Hyperammonemia/therapy , Urea/metabolism , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Disease Models, Animal , Gene Transfer Techniques , Humans , Hyperammonemia/diagnosis , Liver Diseases/therapy , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Severity of Illness Index , Statistics, Nonparametric
5.
Mol Ther ; 21(10): 1823-31, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23817206

ABSTRACT

Viral vectors based on adeno-associated virus (AAV) are showing exciting promise in gene therapy trials targeting the adult liver. A major challenge in extending this promise to the pediatric liver is the loss of episomal vector genomes that accompanies hepatocellular proliferation during liver growth. Hence maintenance of sufficient transgene expression will be critical for success in infants and children. We therefore set out to explore the therapeutic efficacy and durability of liver-targeted gene transfer in the challenging context of a neonatal lethal urea cycle defect, using the argininosuccinate synthetase deficient mouse. Lethal neonatal hyperammonemia was prevented by prenatal and early postnatal vector delivery; however, hyperammonemia subsequently recurred limiting survival to no more than 33 days despite vector readministration. Antivector antibodies acquired in milk from vector-exposed dams were subsequently shown to be blocking vector readministration, and were avoided by crossfostering vector-treated pups to vector-naive dams. In the absence of passively acquired antivector antibodies, vector redelivery proved efficacious with mice surviving to adulthood without recurrence of significant hyperammonemia. These data demonstrate the potential of AAV vectors in the developing liver, showing that vector readministration can be used to counter growth-associated loss of transgene expression provided the challenge of antivector humoral immunity is addressed.


Subject(s)
Argininosuccinate Synthase/genetics , Citrullinemia/therapy , Dependovirus/genetics , Genetic Therapy/methods , Genetic Vectors , Animals , Animals, Newborn , Argininosuccinate Synthase/deficiency , Citrullinemia/genetics , Citrullinemia/mortality , Female , Fetal Therapies , Fetoscopy , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Hyperammonemia/etiology , Immunity, Maternally-Acquired , Liver/metabolism , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Organ Specificity , Pregnancy , Transgenes
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