Background: Oxygen-derived free radicals play a central role in pathomechanisms of reperfusion injury after organ transplantation. Endogenous radical scavenger systems such as superoxide dismutase (SOD) degrade toxic radicals; however, SOD is degraded rapidly when given exogenously. Therefore, the hypothesis that treatment of the donor liver with an adenoviral vector encoding the Cu/Zn-SOD gene (Ad-SOD1) would lead to permanent gene expression and therefore protect the organ against injury and increase survival in a rat model of liver transplantation was tested.
Methods: Some donors were infected with Ad-SOD1, whereas untreated grafts and livers infected with the indicator gene lacZ encoding bacterial beta-galactosidase (Ad-lacZ) served as controls. After orthotopic liver transplantation, survival, serum transaminases, and histopathology were evaluated.
Results: Approximately 80% of hepatocytes expressed beta-galactosidase 72 hr after injection of Ad-lacZ. Moreover, SOD1 gene expression and activity were increased 3- and 10-fold in the Ad-SOD1 group, respectively. After transplantation, 20-25% of rats treated with Ad-lacZ survived. In contrast, all SOD1-treated animals survived. Transaminases measured 8 hr after transplantation in Ad-SOD1 rats were only 40% of those in controls, which increased 40-fold above normal values. Approximately 20% of hepatocytes in untreated and Ad-lacZ-infected organs were necrotic 8 hr after reperfusion, whereas necrosis was nearly undetectable in grafts from rats treated with Ad-SOD1.
Conclusions: This study provides clear evidence for the first time that gene therapy with Ad-SOD1 increases survival and decreases hepatic injury after liver transplantation. Genetic modification of the liver represents a future approach to protect organs against injury where oxygen-derived free radicals are involved.