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April 1998, Volume 5, Number 4, Pages 497-506
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Paper
Major effects of TPO delivered by a single injection of a recombinant adenovirus on prevention of septicemia and anemia associated with myelosuppression in mice: risk of sustained expression inducing myelofibrosis due to immunosuppression
M A Abina1,2, M Tulliez3, C Lacout1, N Debili1, J-L Villeval1, F Pflumio1, F Wendling1, W Vainchenker1 and H Haddada4

1INSERM U 362, Institut Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, France

2Laboratoire d'immunologie, IRCM, 110 avenue des pins ouest, Montréal, Canada

3Service d'anatomo-pathologie, Hôpital Cochin, Paris, France

4CNRS URA 1301, Institut Gustave Roussy, Villejuif, France

Abstract

Adenoviral vectors may be useful tools to deliver a cytokine in vivo. A single intravenous injection of an adenovirus vector containing the human thrombopoietin (TPO) cDNA (AdRSVhuTPO) was able to induce a thrombocytosis for more than 6 weeks in SCID mice, associated with a megakaryocyte (MK) hyperplasia in different organs. A marrow and spleen fibrosis was observed at 6 weeks. In immunocompetent mice, a single AdRSVhuTPO injection led to a moderate and transient thrombocytosis without myelofibrosis. To evaluate the usefulness of TPO for the prevention of secondary side-effects during an aplastic period, mice were subjected to a myeloablative regimen 7 days after the intravenous AdRSVhuTPO injection. In this setting, TPO prevented mortality by accelerating hematological recovery. Survival was essentially related to an improvement in the leukopenia since all control mice died from septicemia. However, the effects of TPO may be potentiated by the release of inflammatory cytokines following the adenovirus infection; AdRSVbetagalactosidase injected-mice had higher numbers of BFU-E and CFU-GM in the marrow than PBS-injected mice. Myelosuppression induced transient immunosuppression responsible for a sustained expression and elevation of platelet numbers for at least 5 months. These results further suggest that TPO may be an effective therapy in diminishing hematological complications related to myeloablative regimens, but emphasize that immunosuppression secondary to myelosuppression may lead to sustained expression associated with a risk of thrombosis and myelofibrosis when delivered by adenovirus vectors.

Keywords

adenovirus vector; thrombopoietin; myelosuppression; immunosuppression; myelofibrosis

Received 19 September 1997; accepted 13 January 1998
April 1998, Volume 5, Number 4, Pages 497-506
Table of contents    Previous  Abstract  Next   Article  PDF
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