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Featured researches published by Carmen Unzu.


Genome Research | 2014

Loss of transcriptional control over endogenous retroelements during reprogramming to pluripotency

Marc Friedli; Priscilla Turelli; Adamandia Kapopoulou; Benjamin Rauwel; Nathaly Castro-Diaz; Helen M. Rowe; Gabriela Ecco; Carmen Unzu; Evarist Planet; Angelo Lombardo; Bastien Mangeat; Barbara Wildhaber; Luigi Naldini; Didier Trono

Endogenous retroelements (EREs) account for about half of the mouse or human genome, and their potential as insertional mutagens and transcriptional perturbators is suppressed by early embryonic epigenetic silencing. Here, we asked how ERE control is maintained during the generation of induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), as this procedure involves profound epigenetic remodeling. We found that all EREs tested were markedly up-regulated during the reprogramming of either mouse embryonic fibroblasts, human CD34(+) cells, or human primary hepatocytes. At the iPSC stage, EREs of some classes were repressed, whereas others remained highly expressed, yielding a pattern somewhat reminiscent of that recorded in embryonic stem cells. However, variability persisted between individual iPSC clones in the control of specific ERE integrants. Both during reprogramming and in iPS cells, the up-regulation of specific EREs significantly impacted on the transcription of nearby cellular genes. While transcription triggered by specific ERE integrants at highly precise developmental stages may be an essential step toward obtaining pluripotent cells, the broad and unspecific unleashing of the repetitive genome observed here may contribute to the inefficiency of the reprogramming process and to the phenotypic heterogeneity of iPSCs.


Human Gene Therapy | 2013

Safety and Liver Transduction Efficacy of rAAV5-cohPBGD in Nonhuman Primates: A Potential Therapy for Acute Intermittent Porphyria

Astrid Pañeda; Esperanza López-Franco; Christine Kaeppel; Carmen Unzu; Ana Gloria Gil-Royo; Delia D'Avola; Stuart G. Beattie; Cristina Olagüe; Roberto Ferrero; Ana Sampedro; Itsaso Mauleón; Stephan Hermening; Florence Salmon; Alberto Benito; Juan J. Gavira; María Eugenia Cornet; María del Mar Municio; Christof von Kalle; Harald Petry; Jesús Prieto; Manfred Schmidt; Antonio Fontanellas; Gloria González-Aseguinolaza

Acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) results from haplo-insufficient activity of porphobilinogen deaminase (PBGD) and is characterized clinically by life-threatening, acute neurovisceral attacks. To date, liver transplantation is the only curative option for AIP. The aim of the present preclinical nonhuman primate study was to determine the safety and transduction efficacy of an adeno-associated viral vector encoding PBGD (recombinant AAV serotype 5-codon-optimized human porphobilinogen deaminase, rAAV5-cohPBGD) administered intravenously as part of a safety program to start a clinical study in patients with AIP. Macaques injected with either 1 × 10(13) or 5 × 10(13) vector genomes/kg of clinical-grade rAAV5-cohPBGD were monitored by standardized clinical parameters, and vector shedding was analyzed. Liver transduction efficacy, biodistribution, vector integration, and histopathology at day 30 postvector administration were determined. There was no evidence of acute toxicity, and no adverse effects were observed. The vector achieved efficient and homogenous hepatocellular transduction, reaching transgenic PBGD expression levels equivalent to 50% of the naturally expressed PBGD mRNA. No cellular immune response was detected against the human PBGD or AAV capsid proteins. Integration site analysis in transduced liver cells revealed an almost random integration pattern supporting the good safety profile of rAAV5-cohPBGD. Together, data obtained in nonhuman primates indicate that rAAV5-cohPBGD represents a safe therapy to correct the metabolic defect present in AIP patients.


Molecular Therapy | 2011

Sustained Enzymatic Correction by rAAV-Mediated Liver Gene Therapy Protects Against Induced Motor Neuropathy in Acute Porphyria Mice

Carmen Unzu; Ana Sampedro; Itsaso Mauleón; Manuel Alegre; Stuart G. Beattie; Rafael Enríquez de Salamanca; Jolanda Snapper; Jaap Twisk; Harald Petry; Gloria González-Aseguinolaza; Julio Artieda; Maria Sol Rodríguez-Peña; Jesús Prieto; Antonio Fontanellas

Acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) is characterized by a hereditary deficiency of hepatic porphobilinogen deaminase (PBGD) activity. Clinical features are acute neurovisceral attacks accompanied by overproduction of porphyrin precursors in the liver. Recurrent life-threatening attacks can be cured only by liver transplantation. We developed recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV) vectors expressing human PBGD protein driven by a liver-specific promoter to provide sustained protection against induced attacks in a predictive model for AIP. Phenobarbital injections in AIP mice induced porphyrin precursor accumulation, functional block of nerve conduction, and progressive loss of large-caliber axons in the sciatic nerve. Hepatocyte transduction showed no gender variation after rAAV2/8 injection, while rAAV2/5 showed lower transduction efficiency in females than males. Full protection against induced phenobarbital-attacks was achieved in animals showing over 10% of hepatocytes expressing high amounts of PBGD. More importantly, sustained hepatic expression of hPBGD protected against loss of large-caliber axons in the sciatic nerve and disturbances in nerve conduction velocity as induced by recurrent phenobarbital administrations. These data show for the first time that porphyrin precursors generated in the liver interfere with motor function. rAAV2/5-hPBGD vector can be produced in sufficient quantity for an intended gene therapy trial in patients with recurrent life-threatening porphyria attacks.


Journal of Translational Medicine | 2012

Transient and intensive pharmacological immunosuppression fails to improve AAV-based liver gene transfer in non-human primates

Carmen Unzu; Sandra Hervas-Stubbs; Ana Sampedro; Itsaso Mauleón; Uxua Mancheño; Carlos Alfaro; Rafael Enríquez de Salamanca; Alberto Benito; Stuart G. Beattie; Harald Petry; Jesús Prieto; Ignacio Melero; Antonio Fontanellas

BackgroundAdeno-associated vectors (rAAV) have been used to attain long-term liver gene expression. In humans, the cellular immune response poses a serious obstacle for transgene persistence while neutralizing humoral immunity curtails re-administration. Porphobilinogen deaminase (PBGD) haploinsufficiency (acute intermittent porphyria) benefits from liver gene transfer in mouse models and clinical trials are about to begin. In this work, we sought to study in non-human primates the feasibility of repeated gene-transfer with intravenous administration of rAAV5 vectors under the effects of an intensive immunosuppressive regimen and to analyze its ability to circumvent T-cell immunity and thereby prolong transgene expression.MethodsThree female Macaca fascicularis were intravenously injected with 1x1013 genome copies/kg of rAAV5 encoding the human PBGD. Mycophenolate mofetil (MMF), anti-thymocyte immunoglobulin, methylprednisolone, tacrolimus and rituximab were given in combination during 12 weeks to block T- and B-cell mediated adaptive immune responses in two macaques. Immunodeficient and immunocompetent mice were intravenously injected with 5x1012 genome copies/kg of rAAV5-encoding luciferase protein. Forty days later MMF, tacrolimus and rituximab were daily administrated to ascertain whether the immunosuppressants or their metabolites could interfere with transgene expression.ResultsMacaques given a rAAV5 vector encoding human PBGD developed cellular and humoral immunity against viral capsids but not towards the transgene. Anti-AAV humoral responses were attenuated during 12 weeks but intensely rebounded following cessation of the immunosuppressants. Accordingly, subsequent gene transfer with a rAAV5 vector encoding green fluorescent protein was impossible. One macaque showed enhanced PBGD expression 25 weeks after rAAV5-pbgd administration but overexpression had not been detected while the animal was under immunosuppression. As a potential explanation, MMF decreases transgene expression in mouse livers that had been successfully transduced by a rAAV5 several weeks before MMF onset. Such a silencing effect was independent of AAV complementary strand synthesis and requires an adaptive immune system.ConclusionsThese results indicate that our transient and intensive pharmacological immunosuppression fails to improve AAV5-based liver gene transfer in non-human primates. The reasons include an incomplete restraint of humoral immune responses to viral capsids that interfere with repeated gene transfer in addition to an intriguing MMF-dependent drug-mediated interference with liver transgene expression.


Molecular Therapy | 2010

Intensive Pharmacological Immunosuppression Allows for Repetitive Liver Gene Transfer With Recombinant Adenovirus in Nonhuman Primates

Antonio Fontanellas; Sandra Hervas-Stubbs; Itsaso Mauleón; Juan Dubrot; Uxua Mancheño; María Collantes; Ana Sampedro; Carmen Unzu; Carlos Alfaro; Asis Palazon; Cristian Smerdou; Alberto Benito; Jesús Prieto; Iván Peñuelas; Ignacio Melero

Repeated administration of gene therapies is hampered by host immunity toward vectors and transgenes. Attempts to circumvent antivector immunity include pharmacological immunosuppression or alternating different vectors and vector serotypes with the same transgene. Our studies show that B-cell depletion with anti-CD20 monoclonal antibody and concomitant T-cell inhibition with clinically available drugs permits repeated liver gene transfer to a limited number of nonhuman primates with recombinant adenovirus. Adenoviral vector-mediated transfer of the herpes simplex virus type 1 thymidine kinase (HSV1-tk) reporter gene was visualized in vivo with a semiquantitative transgene-specific positron emission tomography (PET) technique, liver immunohistochemistry, and immunoblot for the reporter transgene in needle biopsies. Neutralizing antibody and T cell-mediated responses toward the viral capsids were sequentially monitored and found to be repressed by the drug combinations tested. Repeated liver transfer of the HSV1-tk reporter gene with the same recombinant adenoviral vector was achieved in macaques undergoing a clinically feasible immunosuppressive treatment that ablated humoral and cellular immune responses. This strategy allows measurable gene retransfer to the liver as late as 15 months following the first adenoviral exposure in a macaque, which has undergone a total of four treatments with the same adenoviral vector.


Journal of Hepatology | 2010

Porphobilinogen deaminase over-expression in hepatocytes, but not in erythrocytes, prevents accumulation of toxic porphyrin precursors in a mouse model of acute intermittent porphyria

Carmen Unzu; Ana Sampedro; Itsaso Mauleón; Lucia Vanrell; Juan Dubrot; Rafael Enríquez de Salamanca; Gloria González-Aseguinolaza; Ignacio Melero; Jesús Prieto; Antonio Fontanellas

BACKGROUND & AIMS Acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) is characterized by hepatic porphobilinogen deaminase (PBGD) deficiency resulting in a marked overproduction of presumably toxic porphyrin precursors. Our study aimed to assess the protective effects of bone marrow transplantation or PBGD gene transfer into the liver against phenotypic manifestations of acute porphyria attack induced in an AIP murine model. METHODS Lethally irradiated AIP mice were intravenously injected with 5x10(6) nucleated bone marrow cells from wild type or AIP donor mice. To achieve liver gene transfer, AIP mice received via hydrodynamic injection plasmids expressing human PBGD or luciferase, driven by a liver-specific promoter. RESULTS Erythrocyte PBGD activity increased 2.4-fold in AIP mice receiving bone marrow cells from normal animals. Nevertheless, phenobarbital administration in these mice reproduced key features of acute attacks, such as massively increased urinary porphyrin precursor excretion and decreased motor coordination. Hepatic PBGD activity increased 2.2-fold after hydrodynamic injection of therapeutic plasmid. Mice injected with the luciferase control plasmid showed a high excretion of porphyrin precursors after phenobarbital administration whereas just a small increase was observed in AIP mice injected with the PBGD plasmid. Furthermore, motor disturbance was almost completely abolished in AIP mice treated with the therapeutic plasmid. CONCLUSIONS PBGD deficiency in erythroid tissue is not associated with phenotypic manifestations of acute porphyria. In contrast, PBGD over-expression in hepatocytes, albeit in a low proportion, reduced precursor accumulation, which is the hallmark of acute porphyric attacks. Liver-directed gene therapy might offer an alternative to liver transplantation applicable in patients with severe and recurrent manifestations.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2013

Helper-dependent adenoviral liver gene therapy protects against induced attacks and corrects protein folding stress in acute intermittent porphyria mice

Carmen Unzu; Ana Sampedro; Itsaso Mauleón; Manuela Gonzalez-Aparicio; Rafael Enríquez de Salamanca; Jesús Prieto; Tomás Aragón; Antonio Fontanellas

Acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) is a hepatic metabolic disease that results from haplo-insufficient activity of porphobilinogen deaminase (PBGD). The dominant clinical feature is acute intermittent attacks when hepatic heme synthesis is activated by endocrine or exogenous factors. Gene therapy vectors over-expressing PBGD protein in the liver offers potential as a cure for AIP. Here, we developed a helper-dependent adenovirus (HDA) encoding human PBGD (hPBGD) and assessed its therapeutic efficacy in a murine model of AIP. Intravenous or intrahepatic administration of HDA-hPBGD to AIP mice resulted in a sustained hepatic hPBGD expression in a dose-dependent manner. Intrahepatic administration conveyed full protection against induced porphyria attacks at a significantly lower viral dose than intravenous injection. Transgenic hPBGD accumulated only in the cytosol of hepatocytes as the endogenous protein. Characterization of PBGD-deficient mouse strains revealed that a strong PBGD deficiency causes the chronic disturbance of cytosolic and endoplasmic reticulum folding machineries. This disturbance was completely restored over time by the over-expression of hPBGD. HDA-hPBGD is a promising vector that protects against porphyria attacks and resolves the chronic folding stress associated with low levels of PBGD activity.


PLOS ONE | 2014

Innate functions of immunoglobulin M lessen liver gene transfer with helper-dependent adenovirus.

Carmen Unzu; Ignacio Melero; Aizea Morales-Kastresana; Ana Sampedro; Irantzu Serrano-Mendioroz; Arantza Azpilikueta; Maria C. Ochoa; Juan Dubrot; Eduardo Martínez-Ansó; Antonio Fontanellas

The immune system poses obstacles to viral vectors, even in the first administration to preimmunized hosts. We have observed that the livers of B cell-deficient mice were more effectively transduced by a helper-dependent adenovirus serotype-5 (HDA) vector than those of WT mice. This effect was T-cell independent as shown in athymic mice. Passive transfer of the serum from adenovirus-naïve WT to Rag1KO mice resulted in a reduction in gene transfer that was traced to IgM purified from serum of adenovirus-naïve mice. To ascribe the gene transfer inhibition activity to either adenoviral antigen-specific or antigen-unspecific functions of IgM, we used a monoclonal IgM antibody of unrelated specificity. Both the polyclonal and the irrelevant monoclonal IgM inhibited gene transfer by the HDA vector to either cultured hepatocellular carcinoma cells or to the liver of mice in vivo. Adsorption of polyclonal or monoclonal IgMs to viral capsids was revealed by ELISAs on adenovirus-coated plates. These observations indicate the existence of an inborn IgM mechanism deployed against a prevalent virus to reduce early post-infection viremia. In conclusion, innate IgM binding to adenovirus serotype-5 capsids restrains gene-transfer and offers a mechanism to be targeted for optimization of vector dosage in gene therapy with HDA vectors.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Renal Failure Affects the Enzymatic Activities of the Three First Steps in Hepatic Heme Biosynthesis in the Acute Intermittent Porphyria Mouse

Carmen Unzu; Ana Sampedro; Eliane Sardh; Itsaso Mauleón; Rafael Enríquez de Salamanca; Jesús Prieto; Eduardo Salido; Pauline Harper; Antonio Fontanellas

Chronic kidney disease is a long-term complication in acute intermittent porphyria (AIP). The pathophysiological significance of hepatic overproduction of the porphyrin precursors aminolevulinate acid (ALA) and porphobilinogen (PBG) in chronic kidney disease is unclear. We have investigated the effect of repetitive acute attacks on renal function and the effect of total or five-sixth nephrectomy causing renal insufficiency on hepatic heme synthesis in the porphobilinogen deaminase (PBGD)-deficient (AIP) mouse. Phenobarbital challenge in the AIP-mice increased urinary porphyrin precursor excretion. Successive attacks throughout 14 weeks led to minor renal lesions with no impact on renal function. In the liver of wild type and AIP mice, 5/6 nephrectomy enhanced transcription of the first and rate-limiting ALA synthase. As a consequence, urinary PBG excretion increased in AIP mice. The PBG/ALA ratio increased from 1 in sham operated AIP animals to over 5 (males) and over 13 (females) in the 5/6 nephrectomized mice. Total nephrectomy caused a rapid decrease in PBGD activity without changes in enzyme protein level in the AIP mice but not in the wild type animals. In conclusion, high concentration of porphyrin precursors had little impact on renal function. However, progressive renal insufficiency aggravates porphyria attacks and increases the PBG/ALA ratio, which should be considered a warning sign for potentially life-threatening impairment in AIP patients with signs of renal failure.


Gene Therapy | 2015

Helper-dependent adenovirus achieve more efficient and persistent liver transgene expression in non-human primates under immunosuppression

Carmen Unzu; Ignacio Melero; Sandra Hervas-Stubbs; Ana Sampedro; Uxua Mancheño; Aizea Morales-Kastresana; Irantzu Serrano-Mendioroz; R E de Salamanca; Alberto Benito; Antonio Fontanellas

Helper-dependent adenoviral (HDA) vectors constitute excellent gene therapy tools for metabolic liver diseases. We have previously shown that an HDA vector encoding human porphobilinogen deaminase (PBGD) corrects acute intermittent porphyria mice. Now, six non-human primates were injected in the left hepatic lobe with the PBGD-encoding HDA vector to study levels and persistence of transgene expression. Intrahepatic administration of 5 × 1012 viral particles kg−1 (1010 infective units kg−1) of HDA only resulted in transient (≈14 weeks) transgene expression in one out of three individuals. In contrast, a more prolonged 90-day immunosuppressive regimen (tacrolimus, mycophenolate, rituximab and steroids) extended meaningful transgene expression for over 76 weeks in two out of two cases. Transgene expression under immunosuppression (IS) reached maximum levels 6 weeks after HDA administration and gradually declined reaching a stable plateau within the therapeutic range for acute porphyria. The non-injected liver lobes also expressed the transgene because of vector circulation. IS controlled anticapsid T-cell responses and decreased the induction of neutralizing antibodies. Re-administration of HDA-hPBGD at week +78 achieved therapeutically meaningful transgene expression only in those animals receiving IS again at the time of this second vector exposure. Overall, immunity against adenoviral capsids poses serious hurdles for long-term HDA-mediated liver transduction, which can be partially circumvented by pharmacological IS.

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Stuart G. Beattie

University of Massachusetts Medical School

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Gloria González-Aseguinolaza

Chartered Institute of Management Accountants

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