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(Circulation. 2007;115:2506-2515.)
© 2007 American Heart Association, Inc.
Heart Failure |
From the Center for Translational Medicine (S.T.P., P.M., M.B., S.S., J.K.C., W.P., E.G., G.R., A.D.E., J.E.R., W.J.K.), George Zallie and Family Laboratory of Cardiovascular Gene Therapy (S.T.P., M.B., J.K.C., W.P., E.G., G.R., W.J.K.), Eugene Feiner Laboratory of Vascular Biology and Thrombosis (A.D.E.), and Division of Biostatistics, Department of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (A.D.), Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, Pa, and the Medizinische Universitätsklinik und Poliklinik III (S.T.P., P.M., A.R., H.A.K.), Laboratory for Cardiac Stem Cell and Gene Therapy, Otto Meyerhof Zentrum, Universität zu Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
Correspondence to Walter J. Koch or Joseph E. Rabinowitz, Center for Translational Medicine and George Zallie and Family Laboratory of Cardiovascular Gene Therapy, Thomas Jefferson University, 1025 Walnut St, Room 317, Philadelphia, PA 19107. E-mail walter.koch{at}jefferson.edu or joseph.rabinowitz@jefferson.edu
Received October 21, 2006; accepted March 9, 2007.
Background The incidence of heart failure is ever-growing, and it is urgent to develop improved treatments. An attractive approach is gene therapy; however, the clinical barrier has yet to be broken because of several issues, including the lack of an ideal vector supporting safe and long-term myocardial transgene expression.
Methods and Results Here, we show that the use of a recombinant adeno-associated viral (rAAV6) vector containing a novel cardiac-selective enhancer/promoter element can direct stable cardiac expression of a therapeutic transgene, the calcium (Ca2+)-sensing S100A1, in a rat model of heart failure. The chronic heart failurerescuing properties of myocardial S100A1 expression, the result of improved sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ handling, included improved contractile function and left ventricular remodeling. Adding to the clinical relevance, long-term S100A1 therapy had unique and additive beneficial effects over ß-adrenergic receptor blockade, a current pharmacological heart failure treatment.
Conclusions These findings demonstrate that stable increased expression of S100A1 in the failing heart can be used for long-term reversal of LV dysfunction and remodeling. Thus, long-term, cardiac-targeted rAAV6-S100A1 gene therapy may be of potential clinical utility in human heart failure.
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