Abstract
The efficacy of recombinant adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector to deliver and express human blood clotting factor IX (hFIX) gene in skeletal muscle of coagulation factor IX deficiency mouse strain (FactorIX-knockout) is evaluated. The muscle creatine kinase enhancer (MCK) and beta-actin promoter (betaA) were used to drive the hFIX minigene (hFIXml), which was flanked by AAV inverted terminal repeats (ITRs). Following intramuscular injection of high titer (2.5 x 10(11) vector genomes/mL) of rAAV, increased hFIX expression (256 ng/mL of plasma) was achieved. The time course of hFIX expression demonstrated that the expression level gradually increased over a period of two weeks before anti-hFIX antibodies developed in mouse circulating plasma. Those results provided a promising evidence that rAAV-mediated gene transfer and skeletal muscle-specific expression of hFIX is a feasible strategy for treating patients for hemophilia B.
Published Version
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