scholarly journals Lentiviral Vectors for the Treatment and Prevention of Cystic Fibrosis Lung Disease

Genes ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 218 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura Marquez Loza ◽  
Eric Yuen ◽  
Paul McCray

Despite the continued development of cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) modulator drugs for the treatment of cystic fibrosis (CF), the need for mutation agnostic treatments remains. In a sub-group of CF individuals with mutations that may not respond to modulators, such as those with nonsense mutations, CFTR gene transfer to airway epithelia offers the potential for an effective treatment. Lentiviral vectors are well-suited for this purpose because they transduce nondividing cells, and provide long-term transgene expression. Studies in primary cultures of human CF airway epithelia and CF animal models demonstrate the long-term correction of CF phenotypes and low immunogenicity using lentiviral vectors. Further development of CF gene therapy requires the investigation of optimal CFTR expression in the airways. Lentiviral vectors with improved safety features have minimized insertional mutagenesis safety concerns raised in early clinical trials for severe combined immunodeficiency using γ-retroviral vectors. Recent clinical trials using improved lentiviral vectors support the feasibility and safety of lentiviral gene therapy for monogenetic diseases. While work remains to be done before CF gene therapy reaches the bedside, recent advances in lentiviral vector development reviewed here are encouraging and suggest it could be tested in clinical studies in the near future.

2018 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 115-120
Author(s):  
Linda Vong

Purine nucleoside phosphorylase (PNP) is a key enzyme required for the degradation of purine nucleosides into uric acid or their salvage into nucleic acids. Patients who are deficient in PNP suffer from progressive T cell immunodeficiency, with increased susceptibility to infections, autoimmunity, and neurologic abnormalities. In the absence of successful treatment to restore immune function, these patients rarely survive to adulthood. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is the only known cure for PNP deficiency. Use of an HLA-matched donor is preferable as the outcome with alternative donors have been variable; however, this option is rarely available. Gene therapy represents a therapeutic option that bypasses the need for a donor, and thus associated complications. Although first generation γ-retroviral vectors have been successful in some immunodeficiencies, in others, evidence of insertional mutagenesis prompted a halt in their use. More recently, the introduction of safer lentiviral vectors holds promise in offering a viable option to treat immunodeficiency. Here, we present a clinical trial protocol utilizing self-inactivating lentiviral vectors to treat PNP deficiency. Patients will be evaluated up to 3 years post-transplantation to determine the safety of lentiviral-treated stem cell infusion, as well as the extent of immune reconstitution. Statement of novelty: This protocol describes the novel treatment of PNP deficiency using lentiviral-based gene therapy.


2003 ◽  
Vol 77 (10) ◽  
pp. 5902-5910 ◽  
Author(s):  
Patrick L. Sinn ◽  
Melissa A. Hickey ◽  
Patrick D. Staber ◽  
Douglas E. Dylla ◽  
Scott A. Jeffers ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT The practical application of gene therapy as a treatment for cystic fibrosis is limited by poor gene transfer efficiency with vectors applied to the apical surface of airway epithelia. Recently, folate receptor alpha (FRα), a glycosylphosphatidylinositol-linked surface protein, was reported to be a cellular receptor for the filoviruses. We found that polarized human airway epithelia expressed abundant FRα on their apical surface. In an attempt to target these apical receptors, we pseudotyped feline immunodeficiency virus (FIV)-based vectors by using envelope glycoproteins (GPs) from the filoviruses Marburg virus and Ebola virus. Importantly, primary cultures of well-differentiated human airway epithelia were transduced when filovirus GP-pseudotyped FIV was applied to the apical surface. Furthermore, by deleting a heavily O-glycosylated extracellular domain of the Ebola GP, we improved the titer of concentrated vector severalfold. To investigate the folate receptor dependence of gene transfer with the filovirus pseudotypes, we compared gene transfer efficiency in immortalized airway epithelium cell lines and primary cultures. By utilizing phosphatidylinositol-specific phospholipase C (PI-PLC) treatment and FRα-blocking antibodies, we demonstrated FRα-dependent and -independent entry by filovirus glycoprotein-pseudotyped FIV-based vectors in airway epithelia. Of particular interest, entry independent of FRα was observed in primary cultures of human airway epithelia. Understanding viral vector binding and entry pathways is fundamental for developing cystic fibrosis gene therapy applications.


Biomedicines ◽  
2022 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 107
Author(s):  
Narmatha Gurumoorthy ◽  
Fazlina Nordin ◽  
Gee Jun Tye ◽  
Wan Safwani Wan Kamarul Zaman ◽  
Min Hwei Ng

Lentiviral vectors (LVs) play an important role in gene therapy and have proven successful in clinical trials. LVs are capable of integrating specific genetic materials into the target cells and allow for long-term expression of the cDNA of interest. The use of non-integrating LVs (NILVs) reduces insertional mutagenesis and the risk of malignant cell transformation over integrating lentiviral vectors. NILVs enable transient expression or sustained episomal expression, especially in non-dividing cells. Important modifications have been made to the basic human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) structures to improve the safety and efficacy of LVs. NILV-aided transient expression has led to more pre-clinical studies on primary immunodeficiencies, cytotoxic cancer therapies, and hemoglobinopathies. Recently, the third generation of self-inactivating LVs was applied in clinical trials for recombinant protein production, vaccines, gene therapy, cell imaging, and induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC) generation. This review discusses the basic lentiviral biology and the four systems used for generating NILV designs. Mutations or modifications in LVs and their safety are addressed with reference to pre-clinical studies. The detailed application of NILVs in promising pre-clinical studies is also discussed.


Blood ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 106 (7) ◽  
pp. 2530-2533 ◽  
Author(s):  
Boris Calmels ◽  
Cole Ferguson ◽  
Mikko O. Laukkanen ◽  
Rima Adler ◽  
Marion Faulhaber ◽  
...  

Abstract Recent reports linking insertional activation of LMO2 following gene therapy for X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (X-SCID) have led to a re-evaluation of risks following gene therapy with retroviral vectors. In our analysis of 702 integration sites in rhesus macaques that underwent transplantation up to 7 years earlier with autologous CD34+ cells transduced with amphotropic murine leukemia virus (MLV)-derived retroviral vectors containing marker genes, we detected insertion into one locus, the Mds1/Evi1 region, a total of 14 times in 9 animals. Mds1/Evi1 integrations were observed stably long term, primarily in myeloid cells. We hypothesize that this over-representation likely results from an impact on the self-renewal and engraftment potential of CD34+ progenitor cells via insertional mutagenesis at this specific locus. There is no evidence of ongoing in vivo clonal expansion of the Mds1/Evi1 populations, and all animals are hematologically normal without evidence for leukemia. Characterization of integration sites in this relevant preclinical model provides critical information for gene therapy risk assessment as well as identification of genes controlling hematopoiesis. (Blood. 2005;106:2530-2533)


Blood ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 128 (22) ◽  
pp. 4710-4710 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adrian Schwarzer ◽  
Steven R Talbot ◽  
Oliver Dittrich-Breiholz ◽  
Adrian J Thrasher ◽  
Bobby Gaspar ◽  
...  

Abstract The variety of gene therapy vectors for a multitude of different diseases has increased tremendously over the years. However, a number of patients that underwent gene therapy in different trials developed hematological malignancy caused by integration of the provirus in the vicinity of proto-oncogenes. These severe adverse advents prompted intense research efforts towards safer gene therapy, leading to the removal of the long terminal repeat enhancer elements and the use of internal promoters in retroviral vectors. Still, a bottleneck of transition from basic research to clinical application is the test for safety of integrating retro- and lentiviral vectors. Instead of laborious in vivo models with limited predictive value, in vitro assays to screen for insertional mutagenesis are strongly desirable. A decade ago, our lab developed the in vitro immortalization (IVIM) assay to quantify the genotoxic potential of viral vectors, which has been widely used to complete preclinical safety documentation of newly developed integrating vector systems. Despite general acceptance in the field of hematopoietic gene therapy, bias for insertional mutants of the myeloid lineage, a low sensitivity and a long assay run time are clear limitations. We now developed the molecular surrogate assay for genotoxicity assessment (SAGA). The new test is more robust, sensitive and biologically informative. As input we used murine lineage-negative hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPC) that were cultured as described for the IVIM assay. The murine HSPC were transduced with a number of different gammaretro- and lentiviral vectors, including vectors that have been employed in clinical trials for X-SCID and Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome. After 14 days, whole mRNA was isolated from transduced and non-transduced samples and analyzed by Agilent custom microarrays (n=86) and qPCR from nine independent SAGA assays. We applied several Machine Learning algorithms to derive a core set of genes which distinguishes transformed from non-transformed samples in each individual SAGA assay. This set of genes from the individual analysis was further analyzed to derive a core set of genes that is able to robustly separate transformed from non-transformed samples in all assays performed. In order to account for platform-specific effects we validated all microarray results by conventional qPCR-methodology. The SAGA gene set was then cross-validated in an independent validation cohort of SAGA-assays that were not part of the SAGA-training set from which the signature was derived from. The SAGA assay was used to quantify the mutagenic potential of several benchmark vectors. It correctly assigned a high mutagenic potential to vectors (MFG.yc and CMMP.WASP) which led to serious adverse events (SAEs) in clinical trials. Most importantly, the SAGA assay reliably scored high for mutagenic vectors, even when the vector did not transform in IVIM-assays conducted in parallel, demonstrating the higher sensitivity of the SAGA-principle. In contrast, SIN lentiviral vectors with weaker internal promoters (LV.EFS.yc and LV.EFS.ADA) showed no enrichment of the SAGA-core signature and hence scored much safer in the SAGA test. We present the results for these vectors side-by-side either using IVIM or SAGA. In summary, we generated an advanced version of the currently used in vitro insertional mutagenesis screening system by integrating a molecular read-out which enhances reproducibility, sensitivity and reduces assay duration, paving the way for a better preclinical risk assessment of gene therapy vectors. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2005 ◽  
Vol 289 (4) ◽  
pp. L545-L553 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph Zabner ◽  
Todd E. Scheetz ◽  
Hakeem G. Almabrazi ◽  
Thomas L. Casavant ◽  
Jian Huang ◽  
...  

Cystic fibrosis (CF) is caused by mutations in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), an epithelial chloride channel regulated by phosphorylation. Most of the disease-associated morbidity is the consequence of chronic lung infection with progressive tissue destruction. As an approach to investigate the cellular effects of CFTR mutations, we used large-scale microarray hybridization to contrast the gene expression profiles of well-differentiated primary cultures of human CF and non-CF airway epithelia grown under resting culture conditions. We surveyed the expression profiles for 10 non-CF and 10 ΔF508 homozygote samples. Of the 22,283 genes represented on the Affymetrix U133A GeneChip, we found evidence of significant changes in expression in 24 genes by two-sample t-test ( P < 0.00001). A second, three-filter method of comparative analysis found no significant differences between the groups. The levels of CFTR mRNA were comparable in both groups. There were no significant differences in the gene expression patterns between male and female CF specimens. There were 18 genes with significant increases and 6 genes with decreases in CF relative to non-CF samples. Although the function of many of the differentially expressed genes is unknown, one transcript that was elevated in CF, the KCl cotransporter (KCC4), is a candidate for further study. Overall, the results indicate that CFTR dysfunction has little direct impact on airway epithelial gene expression in samples grown under these conditions.


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