Faculty Opinions recommendation of A self-inactivating lentiviral vector for SCID-X1 gene therapy that does not activate LMO2 expression in human T cells.

Author(s):  
Jim Vadolas
Blood ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 89 (5) ◽  
pp. 1800-1810 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sergey Yurasov ◽  
Tobias R. Kollmann ◽  
Ana Kim ◽  
Christina A. Raker ◽  
Moshe Hachamovitch ◽  
...  

To develop an in vivo model wherein human hematopoiesis occurs, we transplanted severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) mice with either human fetal bone marrow (HFBM) or human fetal liver (HFL). After transplantation of SCID mice with cultured HFBM (BM-SCID-hu mice) or HFL cells (Liv-SCID-hu mice), significant engraftment of the mouse bone marrow (BM) and population of the peripheral blood with human leukocytes was detected. Human colony-forming unit–granulocyte macrophage and burst forming unit-erythroid were detected in the BM of the BM-SCID-hu and Liv-SCID-hu mice up to 8 months after transplantation. When the HFBM or HFL cells were transduced with a retroviral vector before transplantation, integrated retroviral sequences were detected in human precursor cells present in the SCID mouse BM and in leukocytes circulating in the peripheral blood (PB) up to 7 months after transplantation. The PB of the BM-SCID-hu mice also became populated with human T cells after implantation with human thymic tissue, which provided a human microenvironment wherein human pre-T cells from the BM could mature. When the HFBM was retrovirally transduced before transplantation, integrated retrovirus was detected in sorted CD4+CD8+ double positive and CD4+ single positive cells from the thymic implant and CD4+ cells from the PB. Taken together, these data indicated that the BM of our BM-SCID-hu and Liv-SCID-hu mice became engrafted with retrovirally transduced human hematopoietic precursors that undergo the normal human hematopoietic program and populate the mouse PB with human cells containing integrated retroviral sequences. In addition to being a model for studying in vivo human hematopoiesis, these mice should also prove to be a useful model for investigating in vivo gene therapy using human stem/precursor cells.


Blood ◽  
2009 ◽  
Vol 114 (22) ◽  
pp. 3580-3580
Author(s):  
Shoba Amarnath ◽  
James CM Wang ◽  
Paul R. Massey ◽  
James L. Riley ◽  
Bruce Levine ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 3580 Poster Board III-517 Immune cell expression of programmed death ligand-1 (PD-L1) represents a particularly important molecular mechanism responsible for control of auto- and allo-immunity mediated by effector memory T cells expressing PD1 receptor. As such, we have reasoned that an immuno-gene therapy approach that enables T cell expression of PD-L1 will represent a novel method of immune regulation. Advantageous features of this proposed therapy include a capacity to: (1) enforce long-term, stable expression of PD-L1; (2) build-in an independent surface marker to allow specific transduced cell enrichment; (3) utilize cellular delivery vehicles comprised of highly functional T cells that persist in vivo after adoptive transfer; and (4) incorporate an enhanced cell fate control or ‘suicide’ gene to permit in vivo control of the immuno-gene therapy. Given these considerations, we developed a recombinant lentiviral vector (LV) incorporating an EF1-α promoter that first encodes the cDNA for a fusion protein consisting of human CD19 (truncated, non-signaling) combined with mutated human TMPK that efficiently activates AZT as a pro-drug (Sato et al; Mol Therapy, 2007); then, after an IRES element, the vector encodes full-length human PD-L1. LV was made after transfection of 293T cells and then concentrated and titered. Initial experiments used Jurkat cells to optimize virus infection and to confirm co-expression of CD19 and PD-L1 by flow cytometry. In previous work, we have demonstrated that ex vivo T cell expansion in rapamycin induces an anti-apoptotic phenotype that permits enhanced in vivo T cell persistence in murine models and human-into-mouse xenogeneic transplant models. As such, we established the goal of infecting primary human CD4+ T cells manufactured using ex vivo co-stimulation (anti-CD3, anti-CD28), Th1-type polarization (inclusion of IFN-α), and exposure to high-dose rapamycin (1 μM); using a 6-day culture system and subsequent anti-CD19 column purification, >90% of resultant transduced T cells expressed PD-L1. Next, we utilized a xenogeneic transplantation model (Rag2−/−γc−/− hosts) to assess in vivo persistence of the gene-modified T cells and transgene expression (10,000 T cells transferred i.v. into each host). In vivo experiment #1 demonstrated that recipients of gene-modified T cells had increased numbers of human T cells in the spleen that co-expressed CD19 and PD-L1 relative to recipients of non-transduced but identically expanded human T cells (harvested at day 5 after adoptive transfer; 38,000 cells/spleen vs. 1000 cells/spleen, p=0.02). Such in vivo harvested T cells were secondarily co-stimulated ex vivo and propagated for an additional 5 days: co-expression of CD19 and PD-L1 persisted in ∼ 50% of T cells harvested from the gene-modified T cell cohort, and T cell numbers were maintained ex vivo (yield of CD19+PD-L1+ cells, 28,600 vs. 1500; p=0.0001). In vivo experiment #2 confirmed and extended these results. At day 21 after adoptive transfer, recipients of gene-modified T cells had increased numbers of human T cells that co-expressed CD19 and PD-L1 relative to recipients of non-transduced but identically expanded human T cells in both the spleen (2800 cells/spleen vs. 390 cells/spleen, p=0.01; n=10 per cohort) and bone marrow (71,600 cells/marrow vs. 6500 cells/marrow, p=0.0001; n=10 per cohort). Such in vivo harvested T cells at day 21 after adoptive transfer were secondarily co-stimulated ex vivo and propagated for an additional 6 days: co-expression of CD19 and PD-L1 persisted in ∼ 50% of T cells harvested from the gene-modified T cell cohort, and T cell numbers were maintained ex vivo (yield of CD19+PD-L1+ cells harvested from spleen, 71,200 vs. 1800, p=0.0008; yield of CD19+PD-L1+ cells harvested from marrow, 226,000 vs. 1400, p=0.0001). Because the rapamycin-resistant T cell vehicle utilized in these experiments manifests an anti-apoptotic phenotype that confers long-term engraftment potential, it is likely that the demonstrated durability in transgene expression relates both to the efficiency of the LV method utilized and to a T cell pro-survival function. In conclusion, the LV-mediated transfer of this novel combination of CD19/TMPK fusion protein and PD-L1 results in stable transgene expression in primary human T cells in vitro and in vivo, thereby opening an avenue to assess PD-L1 mediated immuno-gene therapy under cell fate control. Disclosures: No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 4429-4429
Author(s):  
Amani Ouedrani ◽  
Lounes Djerroudi ◽  
Isabelle Hmitou ◽  
Marina Cavazzana ◽  
Fabien Touzot

Abstract Gene therapy represents an alternative and promising strategy that could provide a path to a curative therapy for HIV-1 infection. One approach involves the introduction of protective gene into a cell, thereby conferring protection against HIV. We plan to conduct an open label phase I/II gene therapy trial for HIV-1 infected patients presenting with lymphoma. The patients will received autologous hematopoietic stem cells transplantation with gene modified CD34+ cells and CD4+ T-cells. CD34+ and CD4+ will be ex vivo transduced by the LVsh5/C46 lentiviral vector (Cal-1, Calimmune, Inc. Tucson, USA). LVsh5/C46 is a SIN lentiviral vector that inhibits two crucial steps of CD4+ T cell infection by the HIV virus: (i) attachment of the virus to its target by downregulation of CCR5 via a short hairpin RNA, (ii) fusion of the virus to the target cell through expression of the C46 inhibitor. We developed a transduction process for CD4+ T-cells using the TransAct™ reagent (Miltenyi Biotec, Bergisch Gladbach , Germany) for CD4+ T-cells activation. Compared to previously published T-cells transduction protocols, the use of Miltenyi TransAct™ permits an equivalent efficacy of transduction - evaluated by measurement of vector copy number through quantitative PCR - without major phenotypic modification. Indeed, CD4+ T-cells ex vivo transduced after activation with the TransAct™ reagent display very few changes in their surface marker with conservation of naive (CCR7+CD62L+CD45RA+), central memory (CCR7+CD62L+CD45RA-) and effector memory (CCR7-CD62L-CD45RA-) subsets in superimposable proportions as initially. Moreover, expression of CD25 remains below 15-25% of cells suggesting a more "gentle " activation of the transduced CD4+ T-cells. Our transduction process had no significant impact in TCRβ repertoire diversity as evaluated by high-throughput sequencing and analyzis of diversity through the Gini-Simpson index or the Shannon index. Finally, transduced CD4 + T-cells retained the ability to to be primed towards the TH1, TH2 and TH17 pathways suggesting that the transduction protocol used did not alter the functional properties of the target cells. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


Blood ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 126 (23) ◽  
pp. 260-260 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julia I Chu ◽  
Lauren A Henderson ◽  
Myriam Armant ◽  
Frances Male ◽  
Colleen H Dansereau ◽  
...  

Abstract The X-linked disorder Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome (WAS), characterized by thrombocytopenia, eczema, recurrent infections, autoimmunity and cancer, is typically treated with allogeneic transplantation. Somatic gene therapy (GT) using autologous CD34+ cells is a promising treatment alternative for high-risk patients lacking matched allogeneic donors, as it avoids graft versus host disease. GT using a γ-retroviral vector with intact viral enhancers was efficacious but had a high rate of leukemia due to insertional oncogenesis. We report here preliminary results of 4 WAS patients who underwent GT using a self-inactivating lentiviral (SIN-LV) vector, in which viral enhancers have been deleted and the human WAS cDNA is controlled by a 1.6kB fragment of the human WAS promoter (w1.6_hWASP_WPRE SIN-LV). WASP expression per cell induced by this vector was lower than in normal cells when examined in murine models and human trials. We hypothesized that the SIN-LV would readily correct immune abnormalities due to selective advantage for WAS protein (WASP) expressing T cells whereas correction of myeloid and platelet abnormalities would require high vector copy number (VCN) in the infused cells. Patients with severe WAS (clinical scores 3-5) were enrolled at a median age of 32 months (17 months-8 years). Patients 1 and 3 had detectable but low WASP expression. Patients 2 and 4 carried mutations that abrogated WASP expression but had evidence of somatic reversion in T and/or NK cells. CliniMACS purified CD34+ mobilized peripheral blood or bone marrow cells were transduced with the vector and infused after busulfan (12-15mg/kg) and fludarabine (120mg/m2) conditioning. CD34+ cell doses ranged from 6.3-24.91 x 106 cells/kg. VCN of the infused cells was variable (3.37, 1.34, 0.54, 1.01 copies/cell). Busulfan exposure was myeloablative or near-myeloablative in patients 1, 3, and 4 (81.2, 77.2, 84.5 mg*h/L) and submyeloablative in patient 2 (48.8 mg*h/L). All patients are alive with median follow-up of 13.5 months (9-24 months). All patients had improvement in eczema, remain platelet transfusion independent and have had no severe bleeding events. WASP expression in T cells was increased post-GT over baseline. Selective advantage for WASP expressing T cells was apparent in patients 1, 2 and 4, who had higher VCN in T cells at 6 months post-GT (0.93-2.21) than in B (0.48-1.7) or myeloid (0.13-0.89) cells. The presence of revertants in patients 2 and 4 did not appear to interfere with T cell reconstitution. In contrast patient 3 who had the highest WASP expression at baseline and the lowest VCN of infused cells (0.5 copies/cell), had the lowest VCN in T cells at 8 months (0.1 copies/cell). Defective T cell proliferation in response to anti-CD3 stimulation, characteristic of WAS, was improved post-GT. Next generation sequencing of T cell receptors in sorted naïve, memory and regulatory T cells revealed profound abnormalities of diversity, decreased entropy and marked clonal expansions pre-GT; most of these improved at 6 months post-GT. Cytoskeletal function in myeloid cells was highly abnormal pre-GT, as shown by absence of podosome formation in monocyte-derived dendritic cells (0-1% vs. 61% in controls). Podosome formation at 6 months post GT was improved but subnormal (4-40%). Only patient 1, who received the highest cell dose, the highest VCN, and myeloablative busulfan exposure had robust platelet reconstitution (pre-GT 24 versus 110 x 109/L 6 months post-GT) and high level gene marking in myeloid cells 0.89 copies/cell. At the same timepoint, patients 2, 3 and 4 had platelet counts of 20-30 x 109/L and correspondingly lower VCN in myeloid cells (0.13-0.27 copies/cell). No severe adverse events related to GT have occurred to date, with relatively short follow-up. Integration site analysis of sorted cells showed highly polyclonal reconstitution, with distributions of integration acceptor sites as expected for the lentiviral vector backbone. In summary, GT using a SIN-LV that induces expression of WASP at levels below wild type improved the clinical and laboratory manifestations of WAS, with better reconstitution in patients receiving cells with high VCN. Disclosures Off Label Use: Off-label use of CliniMACS purified CD34+ cells.


2011 ◽  
Vol 22 (10) ◽  
pp. 1209-1224 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gustavo Salguero ◽  
Bala Sai Sundarasetty ◽  
Sylvia Borchers ◽  
Dirk Wedekind ◽  
Britta Eiz-Vesper ◽  
...  

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