Adenovirus-mediated gene therapy in a mouse model of hereditary tyrosinemia type I

K Overturf, M Al-Dhalimy, CN Ou, M Finegold… - Human gene …, 1997 - liebertpub.com
K Overturf, M Al-Dhalimy, CN Ou, M Finegold, R Tanguay, A Lieber, M Kay, M Grompe
Human gene therapy, 1997liebertpub.com
Mice lacking the enzyme fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase (FAH) have symptoms similar to
humans with the disease hereditary tyrosinemia type I (HT1). FAH-deficient mice were
injected with a first-generation adenoviral vector expressing the human FAH gene and
followed for up to 9 months. Nontreated FAH mutant control mice died within 6 weeks from
fulminant liver failure, whereas FAH adenovirus-infected animals survived until sacrifice at 2–
9 months. Nine of 13 virus-treated animals developed hepatocellular cancer …
Abstract
Mice lacking the enzyme fumarylacetoacetate hydrolase (FAH) have symptoms similar to humans with the disease hereditary tyrosinemia type I (HT1). FAH-deficient mice were injected with a first-generation adenoviral vector expressing the human FAH gene and followed for up to 9 months. Nontreated FAH mutant control mice died within 6 weeks from fulminant liver failure, whereas FAH adenovirus-infected animals survived until sacrifice at 2–9 months. Nine of 13 virus-treated animals developed hepatocellular cancer. Immunohistochemical analysis revealed a mosaic of FAH-deficient and FAH-positive cells in all animals and liver function tests were improved compared to controls. Even mice harvested 9 months after viral infection had >50% FAH-positive cells. These results demonstrate the strong selective advantage of FAH-expressing cells in an FAH-deficient liver but also illustrate the danger of carcinomas arising from FAH-deficient hepatocytes in HT1.
Mary Ann Liebert