Abstract

BackgroundEngineered versions of adeno-associated virus (AAV) are commonly used in gene therapy but evidence revealing a potential oncogenic role of natural AAV in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has raised concerns. The frequency of potentially oncogenic integrations has been reported in only a few populations. AAV infection and host genome integration in another type of liver cancer, cholangiocarcinoma (CCA), has been studied only in one cohort. All reported oncogenic AAV integrations in HCC come from strains resembling the fully sequenced AAV2 and partly sequenced AAV13. When AAV integration occurs, only a fragment of the AAV genome is detectable in later DNA or RNA sequencing. The integrated fragment is typically from the 3’ end of the AAV genome, and this positional bias has been only partly explained. Three research groups searched for evidence of AAV integration in HCC RNAseq samples in the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) but reported conflicting results.ResultsWe collected and analyzed whole transcriptome and viral capture DNA sequencing in paired tumor and non-tumor samples from two liver cancer Asian cohorts from Thailand (N = 147, 47 HCC and 100 intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA)) and Mongolia (N = 70, all HCC). We found only one HCC patient with a potentially oncogenic integration of AAV, in contrast to higher frequency reported in European patients. There were no oncogenic AAV integrations in iCCA patients. AAV genomic segments are present preferentially in the non-tumor samples of Thai patients.By analyzing the AAV genome positions of oncogenic and non-oncogenic integrated fragments, we found that almost all the putative oncogenic integrations overlap the X gene, which is present and functional only in the strain AAV2 among all fully sequenced strains. This gene content difference could explain why putative oncogenic integrations from other AAV strains have not been reported.We resolved the discrepancies in previous analyses of AAV presence in TCGA HCC samples and extended it to CCA. There are 12 TCGA samples with an AAV segment and none are in Asian patients. AAV segments are present in preferentially in TCGA non-tumor samples, like what we observed in the Thai patients.ConclusionsOur findings suggest a minimal AAV risk of hepatocarcinogenesis in Asian liver cancer patients. The partial genome presence and positional bias of AAV integrations into the human genome has complicated analysis of possible roles of AAV in liver cancer.

Highlights

  • Engineered versions of adeno-associated virus (AAV) are commonly used in gene therapy but evidence revealing a potential oncogenic role of natural AAV in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has raised concerns

  • In European and a few Japanese hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) patients, it has been shown that AAV strains similar to AAV2 or AAV13 have the potential to integrate into genes including CCNA2 and CCNE1, contributing to oncogenesis [3,4,5,6]

  • We examine the prevalence of AAV segment presence and integration in two Asian cohorts including both HCC and intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma samples

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Summary

Introduction

Engineered versions of adeno-associated virus (AAV) are commonly used in gene therapy but evidence revealing a potential oncogenic role of natural AAV in hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) has raised concerns. All reported oncogenic AAV integrations in HCC come from strains resembling the fully sequenced AAV2 and partly sequenced AAV13. Three research groups searched for evidence of AAV integration in HCC RNAseq samples in the Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) but reported conflicting results. Recent reports on long-term studies of AAVbased therapy for hemophilia A in dogs [10] and hemophilia B in humans [9] found no cases of liver cancer, but the sample sizes are small. All 12 of these matches were validated by searching for AAV-matching reads with SRPRISM and ReadAligner [31] and by aligning the read pairs found by SRPRISM to all seven AAV sequences and the human genome with blastn [29] using the most sensitive word size of 11

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