scholarly journals Effects of Sulforaphane Obtained from Broccoli Sprout Homogenate in Patients with Sickle Cell Disease (SCD)

Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 4931-4931
Author(s):  
Jennifer Doss ◽  
Jude Jonassaint ◽  
Nirmish Shah ◽  
Marilyn J. Telen ◽  
Jen-Tsan A. Chi

Abstract BACKGROUND Sickle cell disease (SCD) is the most common hemoglobinopathy worldwide, characterized by chronic complications due to ongoing vaso-occlusion and hemolysis. Previous studies have shown that red cells from individuals with sickle cell disease (HbSS) have reduced NRF2 expression levels, which contribute to decreased oxidative stress capacity and increased hemolysis (Sangokoya, et al. 2010 Blood). Additionally, Macari and Lowry have shown that in vitro NRF2 activation of erythroid progenitors results in induction of anti-oxidant stress response genes, as well as increased percent fetal hemoglobin (HbF), which is known to prevent sickling (2011 Blood). Therefore, we hypothesize that NRF2 activation in SCD patients has potential therapeutic benefits by simultaneously inducing HbF and increasing the anti-oxidative stress capacity of red cells. We proposed to activate NRF2 by using sulforaphane (SFN), a well-known natural product enriched in broccoli sprouts. We conducted an open-label, dose-escalation clinical trial for SCD patients to investigate the safety and physiological effects of NRF2 activation by SFN through ingestion of a broccoli sprout homogenate (BSH). METHODS Male and female adult patients (> 18 years) with either HbSS or HbSߺ thalassemia were enrolled at the Duke Comprehensive Sickle Cell Center adult clinic. Exclusion criteria: RBC transfusion or a change in hydroxyurea dose in the last three months, ongoing pregnancy, diabetes, or renal insufficiency (BUN >21 mg/dL and/or creatinine >1.4 mg/dL). Inclusion criteria: Hematocrit (Hct) ≥ 20% and Hb > 6.0 g/dL. Recruited subjects were instructed to avoid additional SFN-containing foods before and during the study period. Subjects ingested a thawed preparation of BSH once daily for 21 days to allow for repopulation of red cells during therapy. Tolerability, toxicity, and physiological effects of NRF2 activation were determined at pre-treatment baseline (day 0), on the last day of ingestion (day 21), and after a wash-out period (day 49). Five patients were recruited for each dose (50g, 100g), with the smaller dose having elicited no safety concerns. RESULTS No safety concerns were noted among the subjects at either dose. In both cohorts, there were no significant differences in the adverse events, pain scores, complete blood counts, complete metabolic profile, reticulocyte count, and LDH levels when comparing days 0 and 21. In the 50g cohort, there was an overall but not statistically significant increase of average HbF from 14.5% to 14.9% (p=0.0786) in all five patients from Day 0 to Day 21; analyses are incomplete for the higher dose. We also observed a trend of NRF2 mRNA target gene induction, including heme oxygenase-1 (HO-1), NAD(P)H dehydrogenase (quinone 1, NQO1), and globin mRNAs, at day 21 vs day 0, which returned to baseline levels at day 49. In the 50g cohort, we observed a 66% increase of ho-1 and 44% increase of nqo1 mRNA levels at day 21 vs. baseline. In the 100g cohort, we observed a 14% increase of ho-1 and 42% increase of nqo1mRNA levels at day 21 vs. baseline. CONCLUSION Our pilot trial suggests that NRF2 activation by BSH may increase NRF2 expression programs and induce fetal hemoglobin. We aim to enroll more patients at escalating doses, as participants present a wide range of clinical variability and may show variable response. Additionally, the lack of statistical significance at the lowest doses along with a lack of safety concerns strongly compel us to pursue more potent NRF2 inducers to elicit more robust physiological changes for additional clinical trials. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2019 ◽  
Vol 244 (2) ◽  
pp. 171-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xingguo Zhu ◽  
Aluya R Oseghale ◽  
Lopez H Nicole ◽  
Biaoru Li ◽  
Betty S Pace

Individuals with sickle cell disease have severe anemia due to the production of abnormal hemoglobin S, chronic red blood cell hemolysis, and increased oxidative stress leading to endothelial cell dysfunction, vasculopathy, and progressive organ damage. The transcription factor NRF2 (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2) is a master regulator of antioxidant proteins; under low oxidative stress, NRF2 is sequestered in the cytoplasm by Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1, β-transducin repeat-containing protein or HRD1, and directed to the proteasome for degradation. When cells are exposed to oxidative stress, NRF2 is released from these repressor proteins, translocates to the nucleus, and activates antioxidant genes to suppress cellular reactive oxidant species and inflammation. In erythroid progenitors, NRF2 also modulates fetal hemoglobin expression through direct binding in the γ-globin promoter and modification of chromatin structure in the β-globin locus. In sickle erythroid cells, NRF2 provides unique benefits through fetal hemoglobin induction to inhibit hemoglobin S polymerization and protection against oxidative stress due to chronic hemolysis. Thus, development of small chemical molecules that activate NRF2 has the potential to ameliorate the clinical severity of sickle cell disease. In this review, we discuss progress towards understanding NRF2 regulation and strategies to develop agents for the treatment of sickle cell disease. Impact statement Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a group of inherited blood disorders caused by mutations in the human β-globin gene, leading to the synthesis of abnormal hemoglobin S, chronic hemolysis, and oxidative stress. Inhibition of hemoglobin S polymerization by fetal hemoglobin holds the greatest promise for treating SCD. The transcription factor NRF2, is the master regulator of the cellular oxidative stress response and activator of fetal hemoglobin expression. In animal models, various small chemical molecules activate NRF2 and ameliorate the pathophysiology of SCD. This review discusses the mechanisms of NRF2 regulation and therapeutic strategies of NRF2 activation to design the treatment options for individuals with SCD.



2008 ◽  
Vol 105 (33) ◽  
pp. 11869-11874 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Lettre ◽  
V. G. Sankaran ◽  
M. A. C. Bezerra ◽  
A. S. Araujo ◽  
M. Uda ◽  
...  


Hematology ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 2013 (1) ◽  
pp. 362-369 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deepa Manwani ◽  
Paul S. Frenette

Abstract Recurrent and unpredictable episodes of vaso-occlusion are the hallmark of sickle cell disease. Symptomatic management and prevention of these events using the fetal hemoglobin–reactivating agent hydroxyurea are currently the mainstay of treatment. Discoveries over the past 2 decades have highlighted the important contributions of various cellular and soluble participants in the vaso-occlusive cascade. The role of these elements and the opportunities for therapeutic intervention are summarized in this review.



1974 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 519-526 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. T. Makler ◽  
M. Berthrong ◽  
H. R. Locke ◽  
D. L. Dawson


2002 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
pp. 1706-1728 ◽  
Author(s):  
Martin H. Steinberg

High fetal hemoglobin (HbF) levels inhibit the polymerization of sickle hemoglobin (HbS) and reduce the complications of sickle cell disease. Pharmacologic agents that can reverse the switch from γ- to β-chain synthesis — γ-globin chains characterize HbF, and sickle β-globin chains are present in HbS — or selectively increase the proportion of adult erythroid precursors that maintain the ability to produce HbF are therapeutically useful. Hydroxyurea promotes HbF production by perturbing the maturation of erythroid precursors. This treatment increases the total hemoglobin concentration, reduces the vaso-occlusive complications of pain and acute chest syndrome, and attenuates mortality in adults. It is a promising beginning for pharmacologic therapy of sickle cell disease. Still, its effects are inconsistent, trials in infants and children are ongoing, and its ultimate value — and peril — when started early in life are still unknown.



2021 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anupam Aich ◽  
Yann Lamarre ◽  
Daniel Pereira Sacomani ◽  
Simone Kashima ◽  
Dimas Tadeu Covas ◽  
...  

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is the monogenic hemoglobinopathy where mutated sickle hemoglobin molecules polymerize to form long fibers under deoxygenated state and deform red blood cells (RBCs) into predominantly sickle form. Sickled RBCs stick to the vascular bed and obstruct blood flow in extreme conditions, leading to acute painful vaso-occlusion crises (VOCs) – the leading cause of mortality in SCD. Being a blood disorder of deformed RBCs, SCD manifests a wide-range of organ-specific clinical complications of life (in addition to chronic pain) such as stroke, acute chest syndrome (ACS) and pulmonary hypertension in the lung, nephropathy, auto-splenectomy, and splenomegaly, hand-foot syndrome, leg ulcer, stress erythropoiesis, osteonecrosis and osteoporosis. The physiological inception for VOC was initially thought to be only a fluid flow problem in microvascular space originated from increased viscosity due to aggregates of sickled RBCs; however, over the last three decades, multiple molecular and cellular mechanisms have been identified that aid the VOC in vivo. Activation of adhesion molecules in vascular endothelium and on RBC membranes, activated neutrophils and platelets, increased viscosity of the blood, and fluid physics driving sickled and deformed RBCs to the vascular wall (known as margination of flow) – all of these come together to orchestrate VOC. Microfluidic technology in sickle research was primarily adopted to benefit from mimicking the microvascular network to observe RBC flow under low oxygen conditions as models of VOC. However, over the last decade, microfluidics has evolved as a valuable tool to extract biophysical characteristics of sickle red cells, measure deformability of sickle red cells under simulated oxygen gradient and shear, drug testing, in vitro models of intercellular interaction on endothelialized or adhesion molecule-functionalized channels to understand adhesion in sickle microenvironment, characterizing biomechanics and microrheology, biomarker identification, and last but not least, for developing point-of-care diagnostic technologies for low resource setting. Several of these platforms have already demonstrated true potential to be translated from bench to bedside. Emerging microfluidics-based technologies for studying heterotypic cell–cell interactions, organ-on-chip application and drug dosage screening can be employed to sickle research field due to their wide-ranging advantages.



Blood ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 90 (2) ◽  
pp. 891-892
Author(s):  
Rita Selby ◽  
Eric Nisbet-Brown ◽  
Raveen K. Basran ◽  
Lebe Chang ◽  
Nancy F. Olivieri


2016 ◽  
Vol 113 (38) ◽  
pp. 10661-10665 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lin Ye ◽  
Jiaming Wang ◽  
Yuting Tan ◽  
Ashley I. Beyer ◽  
Fei Xie ◽  
...  

Hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin (HPFH) is a condition in some individuals who have a high level of fetal hemoglobin throughout life. Individuals with compound heterozygous β-thalassemia or sickle cell disease (SCD) and HPFH have milder clinical manifestations. Using RNA-guided clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats-associated Cas9 (CRISPR-Cas9) genome-editing technology, we deleted, in normal hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs), 13 kb of the β-globin locus to mimic the naturally occurring Sicilian HPFH mutation. The efficiency of targeting deletion reached 31% in cells with the delivery of both upstream and downstream breakpoint guide RNA (gRNA)-guided Staphylococcus aureus Cas9 nuclease (SaCas9). The erythroid colonies differentiated from HSPCs with HPFH deletion showed significantly higher γ-globin gene expression compared with the colonies without deletion. By T7 endonuclease 1 assay, we did not detect any off-target effects in the colonies with deletion. We propose that this strategy of using nonhomologous end joining (NHEJ) to modify the genome may provide an efficient approach toward the development of a safe autologous transplantation for patients with homozygous β-thalassemia and SCD.



2018 ◽  
Vol 140 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhara A. Al-Ali ◽  
Rana K. Fallatah ◽  
Esra A. Aljaffer ◽  
Eman R. Albukhari ◽  
Neriman Sadek Al-Ali ◽  
...  

Disease severity of sickle cell anemia is highly variable, and it is commonly accepted that fetal hemoglobin (HbF) levels play a major role as an ameliorating factor. Investigation of genetic variants have identified several genes to be the principal influencers of HbF regulation. Here, we further elucidated the association of rs4527238 and rs35685045 of ANTXR1 genes in the context of HbF level variance in sickle cell anemia patients of the Arab-Indian haplotype. Samples from 630 sickle cell anemia patients were analyzed for the mutations at 2 specific locations of the ANTXR1 gene by TaqMan®-based real-time PCR. The CC genotype (p = 0.018) of rs4527238 and the TT genotype (p = 0.048) of rs35685045 of ANTXR1 were found to be significantly associated with low HbF expression. The frequency of the CC genotype of rs4527238 was observed to be high in the low HbF patient group compared to the high HbF group (p = 0.009). Likewise, the frequency of the TT genotype of rs35685045 was also high among the low HbF group (p = 0.017). The ANTXR1 genetic mutations and the association with HbF expression in the Arab-Indian haplotype sickle cell patients revealed that the ANTXR1 gene may be a major HbF modulator leading to potential therapeutic options that should be further explored.



Blood ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 134 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 974-974 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel Lessard ◽  
Pauline Rimmele ◽  
Hui Ling ◽  
Kevin Moran ◽  
Benjamin Vieira ◽  
...  

High fetal hemoglobin (HbF) levels are associated with decreased severity and mortality in sickle cell disease (SCD) and beta thalassemia (BT). We have developed a novel gene-edited cell therapy using autologous hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) that have been genetically modified with zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) to reactivate HbF expression. The ZFNs target the binding motif of GATA1 (GATAA) within an intronic erythroid-specific enhancer (ESE) of BCL11A, which encodes a major transcriptional repressor of HbF. Previously, we reported successful ZFN-mediated editing of the BCL11A ESE and reactivation of HbF in both dual (granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) and plerixafor) and single plerixafor mobilized HSPCs(Holmes 2017, Moran 2018). Both related drug candidates, ST-400 and BIVV003, are currently in phase 1/2a clinical trials for transfusion-dependent BT (NCT03432364) and SCD (NCT03653247), respectively. Here, we performed extensive genetic and phenotypic characterization of ZFN-edited HSPCs from healthy and SCD donors. We performed single-cell characterization of BCL11A ESE-edited HSPCs from 4 healthy donors. Briefly, individual HSPCs were sorted and cultured in erythroid differentiation medium. Genomic DNA and protein lysate were collected at day 14 and 20, respectively. In total, we successfully genotyped 961 single-cell derived colonies by next-generation sequencing. The distribution was highly skewed towards biallelic-edited cells (P<3x10-149) representing 94% of edited clones, suggesting that ZFN-expressing cells are likely to become edited at both alleles. We found that each edited allele contributed additively to an increase in HbF% of 15% (P=1x10-80) as measured by UPLC. Clones harboring GATAA-disrupting indels on both alleles displayed on average 34% more HbF% than WT clones (P=1x10-112). In contrast, clones with biallelic indels that left the motif intact displayed a more modest increase (13%, P=1x10-6). Overall, our data revealed that >90% of edited cells were biallelic, displaying on average 27-38% more HbF% despite variation in donor baseline levels. We observed a strong enrichment of biallelic-edited homozygotes (same indel pattern at both alleles) compared to an expected random distribution (161 vs 24; P<1x10-5). These clones may harbor larger deletions not captured by sequencing, as reported previously using CRISPR/Cas9 (Kosicki 2018). To address this question, we used a combination of a small amplicon sequencing assay design covering an informative SNP and a 12kb amplicon Nextera assay. We found that 27% of initially assigned homozygote clones were bona fide homozygotes (44/161) with the remaining harboring indels not originally captured. Nevertheless, most indels remained small, with 91% of indels <50bp, and deletions and insertions >1kb together consisting of less than 1% of alleles. The largest deletion was 4kb, but no indel extended outside the enhancer region of BCL11A or altered the coding region (>26 kb away). Moreover indels >50bp were not associated with enucleation levels (P=0.77), suggesting that they did not alter erythroid function. Overall, these results are consistent with previous data showing that ZFN-mediated gene editing does not impair HSPC function in vitro based on colony forming unit (CFU) production, and that injection of BIVV003 into immune-deficient NBSGW mice results in robust long-term engraftment with no impact on the number of HSPCs or their progeny, including erythrocytes. Finally, BCL11A ESE editing in HSPCs mobilized from one SCD donor resulted in a 3-fold HbF increase consistent across technical duplicates, without impacting CFU production or erythroid enucleation. Importantly, clonal analysis revealed a similar enrichment of biallelic editing (P=6x10-4) and additive HbF up-regulation, with biallelic edited cells reaching 28% more HbF% than unedited cells (50% vs 22%, P=7x10-5). Furthermore, enucleated cells differentiated from edited HSPCs showed attenuation of sickling under hypoxic conditions supporting the potential efficacy of BIVV003. Experiments in HSPCs from additional SCD donors are ongoing. Overall, our data have shown that ZFN-mediated disruption of BCL11A ESE results in enriched biallelic editing with on-target small indels, reactivates HbF and reduces sickling, supporting the potential efficacy and specificity of BIVV003 as a novel cell therapy for SCD. Disclosures Lessard: Sanofi: Employment. Rimmele:Sanofi: Employment. Ling:Sanofi: Employment. Moran:Sanofi: Employment. Vieira:Sanofi: Employment. Lin:Sanofi: Employment. Hong:Sanofi: Employment. Reik:Sangamo Therapeutics: Employment. Dang:Sangamo Therapeutics: Employment. Rendo:Sanofi: Employment. Daak:Sanofi: Employment. Hicks:Sanofi: Employment.



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