Engineering HEK293T cell lines to express nuclease for DNA clearance in lentiviral vector production

Author(s):  
Sadfer Ali ◽  
Claudia Rivera-Trujillo ◽  
Desmond Schofield ◽  
Aminat Omotosho ◽  
Eli Keshavarz-Moore ◽  
...  
2011 ◽  
Vol 5 (S8) ◽  
Author(s):  
Claudio Prieto ◽  
Diego Fontana ◽  
Marina Etcheverrigaray ◽  
Ricardo Kratje

2003 ◽  
Vol 5 (9) ◽  
pp. 737-747 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuel Richard ◽  
Fabien Géronimi ◽  
Magalie Lalanne ◽  
Cécile Ged ◽  
Isabelle Redonnet-Vernhet ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 1072-1079 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jun Liu ◽  
Pengfei Wan ◽  
Qingqing Li ◽  
Xiaoxin Li ◽  
Andrew Li ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Unai Perpiña ◽  
Cristina Herranz ◽  
Raquel Martin-Ibañez ◽  
Anna Boronat ◽  
Felipe Chiappe ◽  
...  

Abstract Background: Cell banks are widely used to preserve cell properties as well as to record and control the use of cell lines in biomedical research. The generation of cell banks for the manufacturing of Advanced Therapy Medicinal Products, such as cell and gene therapy products, must comply with current Good Manufacturing Practice regulations. The quality of the cell lines used as starting materials in viral-vector manufacturing processes must be also assessed.Methods: Three batches of a Master Cell Bank and a Working Cell Bank of the HEK293T cell line were manufactured under current Good Manufacturing Practices regulations. Quality control tests were performed according to product specifications. Process validation includes the training of manufacturing personnel by performing simulation tests, and the continuous measurement of environmental parameters such as air particles and microorganisms. Cell number and viability of cryopreserved cells were periodically measured in order to define the stability of these cellular products.Results: All batches of HEK293T Master and Working Cell Banks met the acceptance criteria of their specifications showing the robustness and homogeneity of the processes. In addition, both Master and Working Cell Banks maintained the defined cell viability and concentration over a 37 month-period after cryopreservation. Conclusions: Manufacturing cell banks under Good Manufacturing Practice regulations for their use as raw materials or final cellular products is feasible. HEK293T cell banks were used to manufacture clinical-grade lentiviral particles for Chimeric Antigen Receptor T-cell based clinical trials.


Blood ◽  
2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (11) ◽  
pp. 1754-1754
Author(s):  
Brian Paszkiet ◽  
Andrew Worden ◽  
Yajin Ni ◽  
Saran Bao ◽  
Franck Lemiale ◽  
...  

Abstract We established the first clinical ex vivo HIV-based vector gene therapy trial in humans with HIV+ CD4+ T-cells. Briefly, this therapy involves modifying patient CD4+ T-cells with our modified lentiviral vector carrying an anti-HIV payload. These cells are then activated and expanded, and re-infused back into the patient. However, cGMP regulations require the use of costly clinical grade reagents (i.e. Retronectin™, CD3/CD28 stimulating paramagnetic beads). In an attempt to reduce ex-vivo processing costs, but not at the expense of transduction levels, we sought to determine a way to directly activate CD4+ T-cells with modified lentiviral vectors. 293FT HEK cell lines, used for producing our lentiviral vectors, were modified to co-express the natural CD28 stimulatory ligand B7.2 (CD86) and ICAM-1 (CD54) proteins on their membrane for co-stimulation and anchoring purposes. When CliniMACS purified normal donor CD4+ T cells were co-cultured with CD54/CD86-expressing cells, in the presence of soluble OKT3 CD3 antibody, CD25 and CD69 activation markers were upregulated, indicating that functional proteins were being expressed at the cell membrane. These CD54 and/or CD86 expressing cells could subsequently be transfected with lentiviral vector plasmid constructs in order to produce host-derived CD54 and/or CD86 bearing HIV-based vectors. EGFP-expressing lentiviral vectors, VRX494, with CD54/CD86-modified envelopes were produced both in these cell lines and by transient transfection of all relevant plasmids, and titers were assayed on Hela-Tat cells by FACS. CD54 modified lentiviral vectors showed increased binding to CD4+ T-cells, as evidenced by significant cell clumping. CD86 (as well as CD54 plus CD86) modified lentiviral vector, with soluble OKT3 CD3 antibody, was shown to activate T-cells, above the levels seen with unmodified lentiviral vectors, as evidenced by the increase in cell surface CD25 and CD69 expression and also the increase in cell size. Cellular expansion of modified lentiviral vector transduced CD4+ T cells reached levels close to CD3:CD28 bead stimulated CD4+ T cell controls over a period of 2 to 3 weeks. The CD3/TCR repertoire was assessed by flow cytometry and, compared to the well-established CD3/CD28 coated M450 Dynabeads stimulatory system as a control, no skewing of the repertoire was observed. CD86 was shown to improve levels of transduction in pre-activated lymphocytes with CD3/CD28 coated M450 Dynabeads. However, CD86 co-expression was crucial for transducing minimally activated CD4+ T cells with only soluble OKT3 CD3 antibody. Levels of transduction and activation were on average 2 to 3 times higher with the modified lentiviral vectors. To our knowledge, we are reporting the first generation of lentiviral particles exhibiting an adhesion property with stimulatory abilities. The development of such a lentiviral vector has valuable implications for clinical application by reducing the number of exogenous reagents in large scale cell processing.


Blood ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 108 (11) ◽  
pp. 5481-5481
Author(s):  
Quang T. Luong ◽  
Kouki Morizono ◽  
Irvin S.Y. Chen ◽  
Sven de Vos

Abstract Despite the success of combination chemotherapy for the treatment of Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), chemotherapy-resistant disease still remains an unresolved problem with most patients eventually dying due to progression. HL is an ideal disease for targeted therapy. CD30 is a 120-kDa transmembrane glycoprotein belonging to the tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-receptor superfamily and strongly expressed in HL Reed-Sternberg cells. We hypothesize that specific, antibody-mediated, CD30-directed delivery of lentiviral vector constructs, encoding for a lethal cellular toxin, will be an effective anti-lymphoma strategy. However, gene delivery based therapy is limited by the transduction of non-target cells. The technology developed by Morizono et al. [Cell Cycle2005: 4: p854; Nature Medicine2005: 11: p346] demonstrates that lentiviruses can be specifically and effectively directed to target cells by conjugation of an antibody to a modified ZZ SINDBIS viral envelope (m168). In this study, we have used HL cell lines (CD30+: L591, L428, Hs445, RPMI6666) and Burkitt lymphoma (BL) cell lines (CD20+/CD30−: Raji, Ramos). We show that conjugation of an anti-CD30 antibody to m168 (m168anti-CD30), permits specific targeting and transduction of CD30+ Hodgkin lymphoma cells while avoiding CD30− Raji and Ramos cells [range 11–83% for HL cells versus 1–4% for BL cells]. Similarly, targeting of CD20+ cells can be achieved. Several of our HL cell lines (L591, Hs445 and RPMI6666) are CD30+/CD20+ [range 11–25% by flow cytometry] and we show that we can equally transduce these cells with an anti-CD20 antibody conjugated to our lentivirus [range 11–30% for CD20+ HL cells; 3% for L428 cells; 40–47% for BL cells]. In addition, we show in L591 cells, that the re-targeted viruses can transduce a greater percentage of target cells than an unmodified virus [83% for m168anti-CD30 versus 43% for VSVG]. These results demonstrate that the efficacy and specificity of targeted therapy can be greatly enhanced and lay the foundation for the development of more stable anti-CD30 directed lentiviral constructs expressing cellular toxins.


2020 ◽  
Vol 2 (7A) ◽  
Author(s):  
Juggragarn Jengarn ◽  
Janet Daly ◽  
Meshach Maina ◽  
Pauline Van Diemen ◽  
Simon Scott ◽  
...  

Influenza D virus (IDV) has been reported in many animal species and potentially humans worldwide. Cattle are considered the major reservoir. There are currently three main lineages based on the haemagglutinin-esterase (HEF) gene: D/OK, D/660 and D/Japan. We performed pilot surveillance for IDV by using pseudotyped lentivirus (PVs) to generate a cell-based test to identify prior-exposure to IDV in animals. The expression plasmids of the HEF genes, D/swine/Italy/2015, D/bovine/France/2014, and D/bovine/Ibaraki/2016, were constructed. The HEF plasmid was co-transfected with lentiviral vector plasmid expressing luciferase, lentiviral Gag-Pol plasmid, and HAT protease plasmid in producer cells (HEK293T/17). Three days post-transfection, supernatants were collected and used for titration on various cell lines and in micro-neutralisation tests. Sera from pigs vaccinated with D/swine/Italy/2015 and D/swine/Oklahoma/2011 were used to undertake a preliminary validation of the micro-neutralisation assay. All pig sera have neutralising activity to influenza D (Italy) pseudotyped lentiviruses. Cow and sheep sera, 145 and 114 specimens, respectively, collected from UK farms were screened using the micro-neutralisation test. We found 97 bovine sera (66.9%) were influenza D antibody positive. Collectively, pseudotyped lentivirus technology opens up opportunities for serological surveillance of influenza D viruses.


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