38 research outputs found

    The role of microglia in human disease: therapeutic tool or target?

    Get PDF

    Myeloid/Microglial driven autologous hematopoietic stem cell gene therapy corrects a neuronopathic lysosomal disease

    Get PDF
    Mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA (MPSIIIA) is a lysosomal storage disorder caused by mutations in N-sulfoglucosamine sulfohydrolase (SGSH), resulting in heparan sulfate (HS) accumulation and progressive neurodegeneration. There are no treatments. We previously demonstrated improved neuropathology in MPSIIIA mice using lentiviral vectors (LVs) overexpressing SGSH in wild-type (WT) hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) transplants (HSCTs), achieved via donor monocyte/microglial engraftment in the brain. However, neurological disease was not corrected using LVs in autologous MPSIIIA HSCTs. To improve brain expression via monocyte/microglial specificity, LVs expressing enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) under ubiquitous phosphoglycerate kinase (PGK) or myeloid-specific promoters were compared in transplanted HSCs. LV-CD11b-GFP gave significantly higher monocyte/B-cell eGFP expression than LV-PGK-GFP or LV-CD18-GFP after 6 months. Subsequently, autologous MPSIIIA HSCs were transduced with either LV-PGK-coSGSH or LV-CD11b-coSGSH vectors expressing codon-optimized SGSH and transplanted into MPSIIIA mice. Eight months after HSCT, LV-PGK-coSGSH vectors produced bone marrow SGSH (576% normal activity) similar to LV-CD11b-coSGSH (473%), but LV-CD11b-coSGSH had significantly higher brain expression (11 versus 7%), demonstrating improved brain specificity. LV-CD11b-coSGSH normalized MPSIIIA behavior, brain HS, GM2 ganglioside, and neuroinflammation to WT levels, whereas LV-PGK-coSGSH partly corrected neuropathology but not behavior. We demonstrate compelling evidence of neurological disease correction using autologous myeloid driven lentiviral-HSC gene therapy in MPSIIIA mice. © The American Society of Gene & Cell Therapy

    Compositions and Methods for Treating Diseases and Disorders of the Central Nervous System

    No full text
    The present invention provides compositions and methods for the treatment or prevention of a neurological disease or disorder of the central nervous system (e.g., a storage disorder, lysosomal storage disorder, neurodegenerative disease, etc.) by reconstitution of brain myeloid cell and microglia upon transplantation of hematopoietic cells enriched in microglia reconstitution potential. The invention also provides compositions and methods for ablating and reconstituting microglia

    Development and maturation of invariant NKT cells in the presence of lysosomal engulfment

    No full text
    A defect in invariant NKT (iNKT) cell selection was hypothesized in lysosomal storage disorders (LSD). Accumulation of glycosphingolipids (GSL) in LSD could influence lipid loading and/or presentation causing entrapment of endogenous ligand(s) within storage bodies or competition of the selecting ligand(s) by stored lipids for CD1d binding. However, when we analyzed the iNKT cell compartment in newly tested LSD animal models that accumulate GSL, glycoaminoglycans or both, we observed a defective iNKT cell selection only in animals affected by multiple sulfatase deficiency, in which a generalized aberrant T-cell development, rather than a pure iNKT defect, was present. Mice with single lysosomal enzyme deficiencies had normal iNKT cell development. Thus, GSL/glycoaminoglycans storage and lysosomal engulfment are not sufficient for affecting iNKT cell development. Rather, lipid ligand(s) or storage compounds, which are affected in those LSD lacking mature iNKT cells, might indeed be relevant for iNKT cell selection. \ua9 2009 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA

    Brain conditioning is instrumental for successful microglia reconstitution following hematopoietic stem cell transplantation

    No full text
    The recent hypothesis that postnatal microglia are maintained independently of circulating monocytes by local precursors that colonize the brain before birth has relevant implications for the treatment of various neurological diseases, including lysosomal storage disorders (LSDs), for which hematopoietic cell transplantation (HCT) is applied to repopulate the recipient myeloid compartment, including microglia, with cells expressing the defective functional hydrolase. By studying wild-type and LSD mice at diverse time-points after HCT, we showed the occurrence of a short-term wave of brain infiltration by a fraction of the transplanted hematopoietic progenitors, independently from the administration of a preparatory regimen and from the presence of a disease state in the brain. However, only the use of a conditioning regimen capable of ablating functionally defined brain-resident myeloid precursors allowed turnover of microglia with the donor, mediated by local proliferation of early immigrants rather than entrance of mature cells from the circulation

    Intracerebroventricular delivery of hematopoietic progenitors results in rapid and robust engraftment of microglia-like cells

    No full text
    Recent evidence indicates that hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) can serve as vehicles for therapeutic molecular delivery to the brain by contributing to the turnover of resident myeloid cell populations. However, such engraftment needs to be fast and efficient to exert its therapeutic potential for diseases affecting the central nervous system. Moreover, the nature of the cells reconstituted after transplantation and whether they could comprise bona fide microglia remain to be assessed. We demonstrate that transplantation of HSPCs in the cerebral lateral ventricles provides rapid engraftment of morphologically, antigenically, and transcriptionally dependable microglia-like cells. We show that the cells comprised within the hematopoietic stem cell compartment and enriched early progenitor fractions generate this microglia-like population when injected in the brain ventricles in the absence of engraftment in the bone marrow. This delivery route has therapeutic relevance because it increases the delivery of therapeutic molecules to the brain, as shown in a humanized animal model of a prototypical lysosomal storage disease affecting the central nervous system

    Characterization of new arylsulfatase a gene mutations reinforces genotype-phenotype correlation in metachromatic leukodystrophy

    No full text
    Metachromatic Leukodystrophy (MLD) is a rare inherited lysosomal storage disorder caused by the deficiency of Arylsulfatase A (ARSA). The disease manifests itself with a broad spectrum of clinical variants, all characterized by progressive neurodegeneration in the central and peripheral nervous systems. The correlation between mutations in the ARSA gene, residual enzymatic activity associated with the mutated alleles and patients' phenotype, which has been extensively drawn for common ARSA mutations, has recently been expanded to rare ones. In this context, functional studies on the rare allelic variances acquire particular relevance for patients' prognostic evaluation. Here we have characterized eight newly identified ARSA mutations, through lentiviral vector-based expression studies on cell lines and ARSA defective murine fibroblasts. In each case, the residual activity associated with the new mutant allele correlates well with the patient's phenotype. Therefore, our results confirm the importance of functional characterization of mutant alleles for a precise genotype-based classification and definition of prognosis in MLD patients, which is particularly relevant for pre-symptomatic diagnosis. \ua9 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc
    corecore