Here's an article in today's WSJ about AAV vectors:
   
                     A Harmless Virus Shows Promise,                    May Revive Hopes for Gene Therapy
                     By ROBERT LANGRETH                     Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
                     An apparently harmless virus that's shaped like a soccer ball may give a                    boost to the beleaguered field of gene therapy.
                     Since researchers began injecting patients with new genes to replace                    damaged ones about a decade ago, their biggest challenge has been                    devising a delivery vehicle that is safe, capable of bearing sufficient                    quantities of healthy genes and able to target specific parts of the body.
                     Last year's death of a young man from Arizona, Jesse Gelsinger, in a                    University of Pennsylvania gene-therapy experiment highlighted the                    potential danger of one of the most commonly used means of delivery --                    adenovirus, a genetically engineered form of the cold virus. Attacked by                    the body's immune system, adenovirus causes side effects that are usually                    temporary flu-like symptoms. In the Gelsinger case, however, the side                    effects fatally crippled the patient's lungs.
                     Mr. Gelsinger's death brought about a regulatory crackdown, including                    stricter oversight of gene-therapy experiments at the University of                    Pennsylvania and elsewhere. But it also sparked a race to create                    gene-delivery vehicles that don't provoke an immune response.
                                          A leading contender: the spherical                                         adeno-associated virus, known as AAV. A                                         number of biotechnology companies are                    testing AAV, and some have had results that show promise for patients                    suffering from a form of hemophilia.
                     This month, scientists with the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, working                    with the tiny biotech firm Avigen Inc. of Alameda, Calif., reported that two                    of the first three hemophilia patients treated with minute quantities of                    AAV-borne genes showed signs of improvement. The outcome suggested                    that the virus was effective in getting the genes where they needed to be,                    without major side effects.
                     Noting that the results are very preliminary, the Children's Hospital                    scientists were excited nonetheless because the experiment was meant to                    evaluate only the safety of the experimental therapy, not its effectiveness.
                     Elsewhere, Targeted Genetics Corp., based in Seattle, expects to begin                    tests of AAV gene therapy involving patients suffering from a more                    common form of hemophilia in a year. Cell Genesys Inc., Foster City,                    Calif., is considering a similar AAV patient trial.
                     Scientists are focusing on hemophilia because it is viewed as one of the                    most straightforward diseases to treat with gene therapy. People with                    hemophilia are missing a gene needed to make one of two key proteins                    needed for the blood to clot. Up to several times a week, they must inject                    themselves with genetically engineered versions of the protein to prevent                    spontaneous internal bleeding. But these medications are expensive and                    often don't prevent crippling joint problems caused by internal bleeding.
                     With gene therapy, researchers are hoping to use AAV to replace this                    defective gene with healthy new ones, so that patients can produce enough                    clotting protein on their own.
                     This method doesn't have to be particularly efficient to work: If the new                    genes produce a mere 5% of normal levels of clotting protein, it should be                    enough to alleviate most symptoms. By contrast, when dealing with some                    other diseases, most or all of the defective cells have to be corrected for                    the treatment to work.
                     Avigen's hemophilia results "are tantalizingly encouraging," says Savio                    Woo, president of the American Society of Gene Therapy. Still, the                    hemophilia tests are far from a sure thing, and a failure could raise the                    question of whether any gene-therapy breakthrough is possible using                    currently available technologies. Moreover, even if the AAV concept                    works, it may be limited to a handful of diseases and not be useful in                    gene-therapy treatments targeting acute diseases such as artery blockage                    or advanced cancer.
                     Some scientists argue that none of the existing gene-therapy technologies                    are not yet ready for prime time. Merck & Co., for example, has spent                    years trying to perfect a gene-delivery approach involving an improved,                    second-generation adenovirus, but the company has decided against                    patient tests soon. "We think there is a lot more work that needs to be                    done" on improving gene-delivery and manufacturing techniques before                    such tests begin, says Roger Perlmutter, who heads discovery research for                    the drug giant.
                     Meanwhile, Chiron Corp., Emeryville, Calif., is continuing a hemophilia                    gene-therapy trial -- one that doesn't use AAV -- but recently curtailed                    much of its other gene-therapy research effort to reduce spending.
                     The first approach to gene therapy entailed removing defective cells before                    the new genes could be put in. That was a logistical quagmire, and so                    scientists started looking for ways new genes could be directly injected into                    the body.
                     What they came up with was the adenovirus, a respiratory bug that causes                    the common cold. With one injection in the lung, liver, or muscle, it can                    quickly infect millions of cells.
                     By the early 1990s, many scientists across the country rushed to test this                    method for terminal cancer, cystic fibrosis, and heart disease, using                    genetically engineered adenoviruses that can't replicate inside the body.
                     But the downside of adenovirus soon became apparent. Besides the risk of                    out-of-control side effects, there was the fact that the immune system                    typically kills cells injected with new adenovirus-borne genes within several                    weeks, thus limiting the treatment's effectiveness.
                     A handful of scientists recognized the problems of adenovirus early on and                    focused their energies on AAV. One was Dr. Carter of Targeted Genetics.                    Another was Avigen's founder, John Monahan. He created Avigen in 1992                    after another gene-therapy company he had worked for showed no                    interest in pursuing AAV gene therapy.
                     At the time, little was known about AAV, and there was great skepticism                    about the method. All viruses are primitive in that they can't reproduce on                    their own, requiring help from human or animal cells. But AAV is so                    primitive that it cannot reproduce except in the presence of adenovirus --                    hence the name adeno-associated virus. With this limitation, critics said it                    would be impossible to manufacture AAV in commercial quantities.
                     Researchers at Avigen and Targeted Genetics spent years engineering a                    way to manufacture AAV. They removed all the viral genes from its center,                    leaving an empty viral shell to which a payload of genes to treat hemophilia                    or cystic fibrosis could be added. Both companies now say they have                    perfected production methods to make enough AAV for human testing.
                     Meanwhile, in the early 1990s, two academic researchers -- Katherine                    High of Children's Hospital and Mark Kay of Stanford University School                    of Medicine -- had independently become fascinated with treating                    hemophilia patients by gene therapy. Both tried various approaches that                    didn't work, and both eventually turned to AAV in frustration.
                     To their amazement, it worked. "I couldn't believe the data at first," recalls                    Dr. Kay about the first time he used AAV to deliver blood-clotting genes                    to lab mice. "It was the first time I have done an experiment that had                    worked so well I couldn't see what the glitch would be going forward."
                     Last winter, teams led by Dr. High and Dr. Kay stunned scientists by                    showing that a single series of AAV injections could essentially cure dogs                    of hemophilia for months at a time. Today, two years after the initial                    injections, these dogs are still producing high levels of blood proteins, with                    no obvious side effects, Dr. High says.
                     The big question is whether the AAV method can work in people. Drs.                    High and Kay have teamed up with Avigen to test AAV in patients with                    hemophilia B, while Targeted Genetics is gearing up for human trials of                    AAV gene therapy for the more common form of the disease, hemophilia                    A.
                     Scientists are cautious because so many previous gene-therapy treatments                    that worked in animals have failed in people. Although the Avigen results                    seem promising for hemophilia patients, much larger trials are needed                    before the effectiveness of AAV can be assessed with certainty.
                     Write to Robert Langreth at robert.langreth@wsj.com |