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Dive into the research topics where Eric Dobrzynski is active.

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Featured researches published by Eric Dobrzynski.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2003

Induction of immune tolerance to coagulation factor IX antigen by in vivo hepatic gene transfer

Federico Mingozzi; Yi-Lin Liu; Eric Dobrzynski; Antje Kaufhold; Jianhua Liu; YuQin Wang; Valder R. Arruda; Katherine A. High; Roland W. Herzog

Gene replacement therapy is an attractive approach for treatment of genetic disease, but may be complicated by the risk of a neutralizing immune response to the therapeutic gene product. There are examples of humoral and cellular immune responses against the transgene product as well as absence of such responses, depending on vector design and the underlying mutation in the dysfunctional gene. It has been unclear, however, whether transgene expression can induce tolerance to the therapeutic antigen. Here, we demonstrate induction of immune tolerance to a secreted human coagulation factor IX (hF.IX) antigen by adeno-associated viral gene transfer to the liver. Tolerized mice showed absence of anti-hF.IX and substantially reduced in vitro T cell responses after immunization with hF.IX in adjuvant. Tolerance induction was antigen specific, affected a broad range of Th cell subsets, and was favored by higher levels of transgene expression as determined by promoter strength, vector dose, and mouse strain. Hepatocyte-derived hF.IX expression induced regulatory CD4(+) T cells that can suppress anti-hF.IX formation after adoptive transfer. With a strain-dependent rate of success, tolerance to murine F.IX was induced in mice with a large F.IX gene deletion, supporting the relevance of these data for treatment of hemophilia B and other genetic diseases.


Gene Therapy | 2005

Major role of local immune responses in antibody formation to factor IX in AAV gene transfer

Lixin Wang; Ou Cao; B Swalm; Eric Dobrzynski; Federico Mingozzi; Roland W. Herzog

The risk of an immune response to the coagulation factor IX (F.IX) transgene product is a concern in gene therapy for the X-linked bleeding disorder hemophilia B. In order to investigate the mechanism of F.IX-specific lymphocyte activation in the context of adeno-associated viral (AAV) gene transfer to skeletal muscle, we injected AAV-2 vector expressing human F.IX (hF.IX) into outbred immune-competent mice. Systemic hF.IX levels were transiently detected in the circulation, but diminished concomitant with activation of CD4+ T and B cells. ELISPOT assays documented robust responses to hF.IX in the draining lymph nodes of injected muscle by day 14. Formation of inhibitory antibodies to hF.IX was observed over a wide range of vector doses, with increased doses causing stronger immune responses. A prolonged inflammatory reaction in muscle started at 1.5–2 months, but ultimately failed to eliminate transgene expression. By 1.5 months, hF.IX antigen re-emerged in circulation in ∼70% of animals injected with high vector dose. Hepatic gene transfer elicited only infrequent and weaker immune responses, with higher vector doses causing a reduction in T-cell responses to hF.IX. In summary, the data document substantial influence of target tissue, local antigen presentation, and antigen levels on lymphocyte responses to F.IX.


Human Gene Therapy | 2004

Therapeutic Levels of Factor IX Expression Using a Muscle-Specific Promoter and Adeno-Associated Virus Serotype 1 Vector

Yi-Lin Liu; Federico Mingozzi; Sol M. Rodriguéz-Colôn; Sasha Joseph; Eric Dobrzynski; Takashi Suzuki; Katherine A. High; Roland W. Herzog

Extensive studies in animal models of the X-linked bleeding disorder hemophilia B (deficiency in functional coagulation factor IX, F.IX) have shown that muscle-directed adeno-associated (AAV)-mediated F.IX gene transfer can be used to treat this disease. However, large vector doses of AAV-2 vector are required for therapeutic levels of expression, and the number of vector doses that can be injected per intramuscular site is limited. Several studies have shown that some of these limitations can be overcome by use of AAV serotype 1 vector. Here, we demonstrate levels of F.IX transgene expression from a synthetic muscle-specific promoter (C5-12) that were higher than from the cytomegalovirus (CMV) immediate-early enhancer-promoter in cultured muscle cells in vitro and approximately 50% of CMV-driven expression in vivo in murine skeletal muscle after AAV-1 gene transfer. These data show for the first time that a tissue-specific promoter can be used to achieve therapeutic levels of muscle-derived F.IX expression in the context of viral gene transfer. However, use of a muscle-specific promoter did not prevent antibody formation in response to a murine F.IX transgene product in mice with F.IX gene deletion, indicating that the risk of humoral immune responses remains in the context of an immunologically unfavorable mutation.


Blood | 2007

Induction and role of regulatory CD4+CD25+ T cells in tolerance to the transgene product following hepatic in vivo gene transfer

Ou W. Cao; Eric Dobrzynski; Lixin Wang; Sushrusha Nayak; Bethany Mingle; Cornelius P. Terhorst; Roland W. Herzog


Blood | 2004

Induction of antigen-specific CD4+ T-cell anergy and deletion by in vivo viral gene transfer

Eric Dobrzynski; Federico Mingozzi; Yi-Lin Liu; Elisabeth Bendo; Ou Cao; Lixin Wang; Roland W. Herzog


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2006

Prevention of cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses to factor IX-expressing hepatocytes by gene transfer-induced regulatory T cells

Eric Dobrzynski; Julie C. Fitzgerald; Ou Cao; Federico Mingozzi; Lixin Wang; Roland W. Herzog


Blood | 2005

Systemic protein delivery by muscle-gene transfer is limited by a local immune response.

Lixin Wang; Eric Dobrzynski; Alexander Schlachterman; Ou Cao; Roland W. Herzog


Seminars in Thrombosis and Hemostasis | 2004

Immune implications of gene therapy for hemophilia

Roland W. Herzog; Eric Dobrzynski


Human Gene Therapy | 2007

Muscle as a Target for Supplementary Factor IX Gene Transfer

Brad E. Hoffman; Eric Dobrzynski; Lixin Wang; Lauren Hirao; Federico Mingozzi; Ou Cao; Roland W. Herzog


Clinical Medicine & Research | 2005

Tolerance Induction by Viral In Vivo Gene Transfer

Eric Dobrzynski; Roland W. Herzog

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Federico Mingozzi

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Ou Cao

University of Florida

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Yi-Lin Liu

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Bethany Mingle

University of Pennsylvania

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Katherine A. High

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia

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Cornelius P. Terhorst

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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