7 research outputs found

    36. Genome-Wide Insight Into the Transcriptional Modulations Triggered By Lentiviral Transduction in Human Hematopoietic Stem Cells

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    Recent studies suggest that hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) can sense foreign nucleic acids and pathogen-associated molecular patterns (PAMPs). Exposure to lentiviral vectors (LV) upon gene transfer may thus trigger acute host responses in HSC that could potentially impact on their biological properties, although no comprehensive studies are available to date. We have performed a high throughput RNA-Seq analysis on human cord-blood (CB)-derived CD34+ hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPC) exposed to research- or clinical-grade VSV-g pseudotyped (SIN) LV at a high multiplicity of infection, matching current clinical vector dose requirements. As controls, cells were exposed to non-transducing Env-less, genome-less or heat inactivated control vectors or kept in culture untreated. RNA was extracted at different times early after transduction, processed and ran in Illumina HiSeq2000. Analysis of Differential Expression in Time Course was performed using LIMMA R/BioConductor library. Key pathways were assessed by Term Enrichment Analysis considering KEGG pathways and Gene Ontology Biological processes. Transduction with both research-and clinical-grade LV significantly triggered DNA damage and apoptosis-related responses. In particular, p53 signaling was among the most significantly altered pathways (p<3.47×10−14) and induction of several key players, including a 8-fold increase in p21 mRNA, was further confirmed by Taqman. This signaling occurred also in bone-marrow-derived CD34+ cells and was integration-independent as Integrase-Defective LV (IDLV) induced p21 to a similar extent as LV. Furthermore, equal induction was observed in all CD34+ subpopulations, including in the most primitive CD38-CD133+ fraction. Finally, LV/IDLV exposure lead to a slight but significant increase in the percentage of apoptotic HSPC in culture (p<0.001) as compared to control vector exposed cells and untreated controls. Experiments are ongoing to further investigate the potential short and long-term consequences of this signaling on the biological properties of HSPC in vitro and in vivo. Overall, our results suggest for the first time that LV transduction triggers transcriptional changes in HSPC involving pathways pivotal for their biology. Better understanding of the potential functional consequences this may have will be important for the development of improved gene therapy protocols

    6. Targeted Genome Editing of Cell Lines for Improved and Scalable Production of Lentiviral Vectors for Human Gene Therapy

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    Lentiviral vectors (LVs) represent efficient and versatile vehicles for gene therapy. The manufacturing of clinical-grade LVs relies on transient transfection of vector components. This method is labor and cost intensive and becomes challenging when facing the need of scale-up and standardization. The development of stable LV producer cell lines will greatly facilitate overcoming these hurdles. We have generated an inducible LV packaging cell line, carrying the genes encoding for third-generation vector components stably integrated in the genome under the control of tetracycline-regulated promoters. In order to minimize the immunogenicity of LVs for in vivo administration, we set out to remove the highly polymorphic and antigenic class-I major histocompatibility complex (MHC-I) expressed on LV packaging cells and subsequently incorporated on the LV envelope. We performed genetic disruption of the ÎČ-2 microglobulin (B2M) gene, a required component for the assembly and trafficking of the MHC-I to the plasma membrane in LV producer cells, exploiting the RNA-guided Cas9 nuclease. We generated B2M-negative cells devoid of surface-exposed MHC-I, which retain the ability to produce LVs. In order to insert the LV genome of interest in the packaging cell line, we performed site-specific integration in predetermined loci of the genome of these cells, chosen for robust expression, exploiting artificial nucleases and homology-directed repair. In several independent iterations of this process, we generated producer cell lines both for LV expressing marker genes and a therapeutic gene, i.e. coagulation factor IX (FIX), the gene mutated in hemophilia B. We show that these LV producer cells are stable in culture and can produce several liters of LV-containing conditioned medium. These LVs have comparable or only slightly lower infectious titer and specific infectivity than LVs produced by state-of-the-art transient transfection process and can transduce therapeutically relevant target cells, such as hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells and T lymphocytes to high efficiency. Moreover, we intravenously administered FIX-expressing LVs produced by the cell line to hemophilia B mice and established therapeutic levels of circulating FIX. These data indicate that site-specific integration is an efficient, rapid and reproducible method to generate LV producer cells, starting from a universal stable inducible LV packaging cell line. Overall, we provide evidence that rationally designed targeted genome engineering can be used to improve the quality, safety and sustainability of LV production for clinical use

    286 genome editing of inducible cell lines for scalable production of improved lentiviral vectors for human gene therapy

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    Lentiviral vectors (LVs) represent efficient and versatile vehicles for gene therapy. Current manufacturing of clinical-grade LVs mostly relies on transient transfection of plasmids expressing the multiple vector components. This method is labor and cost intensive and becomes challenging when facing the need of scale-up and standardization. The development of stable LV producer cell lines will greatly facilitate overcoming these hurdles. We have generated an inducible LV packaging cell line, carrying the genes encoding for third-generation vector components stably integrated in the genome under the control of tetracycline-regulated promoters. These LV packaging cells are stable in culture even after single-cell cloning and can be scaled up to large volumes. In order to minimize the immunogenicity of LVs for in vivo administration, we set out to remove the highly polymorphic class-I major histocompatibility complexes (MHC-I) expressed on LV packaging cells and incorporated in the LV envelope. We performed genetic disruption of the ÎČ-2 microglobulin (B2M) gene, a required component for the assembly and trafficking of all MHC-I to the plasma membrane in LV producer cells, exploiting the RNA-guided Cas9 nuclease. The resulting B2M-negative cells were devoid of surface-exposed MHC-I and produced MHC-free LVs. These LVs retain their infectivity on all tested cells in vitro and efficiently transduced the mouse liver upon intravenous administration. Strikingly, the MHC-free LVs showed significantly reduced immunogenicity in a T-cell activation assay performed on human primary T cells co-cultured with syngeneic monocytes exposed to LV, from several (n=7) healthy donors. To reproducibly generate LV-producer cell lines from these cells, we insert the LV genome of interest in the AAVS1 locus, chosen for robust expression, exploiting engineered nucleases and homology-directed repair. By this strategy, we have obtained several independent producer cell lines for LVs that express marker or therapeutic genes and are devoid of plasmid DNA contamination. LVs produced by these cells reproducibly show titer and infectivity within the lower bound range of standard optimized transient transfection, and effectively transduce relevant target cells, such as hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells and T cells ex vivo and the mouse liver in vivo. Overall, we provide evidence that rationally designed targeted genome engineering can be used to improve the yield, quality, safety and sustainability of LV production for clinical use

    Lentiviral vectors escape innate sensing but trigger p53 in human hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells

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    Abstract Clinical application of lentiviral vector (LV)‐based hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPC) gene therapy is rapidly becoming a reality. Nevertheless, LV‐mediated signaling and its potential functional consequences on HSPC biology remain poorly understood. We unravel here a remarkably limited impact of LV on the HSPC transcriptional landscape. LV escaped innate immune sensing that instead led to robust IFN responses upon transduction with a gamma‐retroviral vector. However, reverse‐transcribed LV DNA did trigger p53 signaling, activated also by non‐integrating Adeno‐associated vector, ultimately leading to lower cell recovery ex vivo and engraftment in vivo. These effects were more pronounced in the short‐term repopulating cells while long‐term HSC frequencies remained unaffected. Blocking LV‐induced signaling partially rescued both apoptosis and engraftment, highlighting a novel strategy to further dampen the impact of ex vivo gene transfer on HSPC. Overall, our results shed light on viral vector sensing in HSPC and provide critical insight for the development of more stealth gene therapy strategies

    Phagocytosis-shielded lentiviral vectors improve liver gene therapy in nonhuman primates

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    International audienceLiver-directed gene therapy for the coagulation disorder hemophilia showed safe and effective results in clinical trials using adeno-associated viral vectors to replace a functional coagulation factor, although some unmet needs remain. Lentiviral vectors (LVs) may address some of these hurdles because of their potential for stable expression and the low prevalence of preexisting viral immunity in humans. However, systemic LV administration to hemophilic dogs was associated to mild acute toxicity and low efficacy at the administered doses. Here, exploiting intravital microscopy and LV surface engineering, we report a major role of the human phagocytosis inhibitor CD47, incorporated into LV cell membrane, in protecting LVs from uptake by professional phagocytes and innate immune sensing, thus favoring biodistribution to hepatocytes after systemic administration. By enforcing high CD47 surface content, we generated phagocytosis-shielded LVs which, upon intravenous administration to nonhuman primates, showed selective liver and spleen targeting and enhanced hepatocyte gene transfer compared to parental LV, reaching supraphysiological activity of human coagulation factor IX, the protein encoded by the transgene, without signs of toxicity or clonal expansion of transduced cells
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