Ex vivo treatment of cytomegalovirus in human donor lungs using a novel chemokine-based immunotoxin

Rafaela V.P. Ribeiro, Terrance Ku, Aizhou Wang, Layla Pires, Victor H. Ferreira, Vinicius Michaelsen, Aadil Ali, Marcos Galasso, Sajad Moshkelgosha, Anajara Gazzalle, Mads G. Jeppesen, Mette M. Rosenkilde, Mingyao Liu, Lianne G. Singer, Deepali Kumar, Shaf Keshavjee, John Sinclair, Thomas N. Kledal, Atul Humar, Marcelo Cypel*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

23 Citations (Scopus)
30 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Background: Transmission of latent human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) via organ transplantation with post-transplant viral reactivation is extremely prevalent and results in substantial adverse impact on outcomes. Therapies targeting the latent reservoir within the allograft to mitigate viral transmission would represent a major advance. Here, we delivered an immunotoxin (F49A-FTP) that targets and kills latent HCMV aiming at reducing the HCMV reservoir from donor lungs using ex-vivo lung perfusion (EVLP). Methods: HCMV seropositive human lungs were placed on EVLP alone or EVLP + 1mg/L of F49A-FTP for 6 hours (n = 6, each). CD14+ monocytes isolated from biopsies pre and post EVLP underwent HCMV reactivation assay designed to evaluate viral reactivation capacity. Off-target effects of F49A-FTP were studied evaluating cell death markers of CD34+ and CD14+ cells using flow cytometry. Lung function on EVLP and inflammatory cytokine production were evaluated as safety endpoints. Results: We demonstrate that lungs treated ex-vivo with F49A-FTP had a significant reduction in HCMV reactivation compared to controls, suggesting successful targeting of latent virus (76% median reduction in F49A-FTP vs 15% increase in controls, p = 0.0087). Furthermore, there was comparable cell death rates of the targeted cells between both groups, suggesting no off-target effects. Ex-vivo lung function was stable over 6 hours and no differences in key inflammatory cytokines were observed demonstrating safety of this novel treatment. Conclusions: Ex-vivo F49A-FTP treatment of human lungs targets and kills latent HCMV, markedly attenuating HCMV reactivation. This approach demonstrates the first experiments targeting latent HCMV in a donor organ with promising results towards clinical translation.

Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of Heart and Lung Transplantation
Volume41
Issue number3
Pages (from-to)287-297
ISSN1053-2498
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation

Keywords

  • chemokine-based immunotoxin
  • ex vivo lung perfusion
  • human cytomegalovirus
  • latent cytomegalovirus
  • lung transplantation

Cite this