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Integration of retroviral vectors induces minor changes in the transcriptional activity of T cells from ADA-SCID patients treated with gene therapy

Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2009
Citazione:
Integration of retroviral vectors induces minor changes in the transcriptional activity of T cells from ADA-SCID patients treated with gene therapy / B., Cassani; E., Montini; Maruggi, Giulietta; A., Ambrosi; M., Mirolo; S., Selleri; E., Biral; I., Frugnoli; V., Hernandez Trujillo; C., Di Serio; M. G., Roncarolo; L., Naldini; Mavilio, Fulvio; A., Aiuti. - In: BLOOD. - ISSN 0006-4971. - STAMPA. - 114:17(2009), pp. 3546-3556. [10.1182/blood-2009-02-202085]
Abstract:
Gene transfer into hematopoietic stem cells by gamma-retroviral vectors (RVs) is an effective treatment for inherited blood disorders, although potentially limited by the risk of insertional mutagenesis. We evaluated the genomic impact of RV integration in T lymphocytes from adenosine deaminase-deficient severe combined immunodeficiency (ADA-SCID) patients 10 to 30 months after infusion of autologous, genetically corrected CD34(+) cells. Expression profiling on ex vivo T-cell bulk population revealed no difference with respect to healthy controls. To assess the effect of vector integration on gene expression at the single-cell level, primary T-cell clones were isolated from 2 patients. T-cell clones harbored either 1 (89.8%) or 2 (10.2%) vector copies per cell and displayed partial to full correction of ADA expression, purine metabolism, and T-cell receptor-driven functions. Analysis of RV integration sites indicated a high diversity in T-cell origin, consistently with the polyclonal T-cell receptor-Vbeta repertoire. Quantitative transcript analysis of 120 genes within a 200-kb window around RV integration sites showed modest (2.8- to 5.2-fold) dysregulation of 5.8% genes in 18.6% of the T-cell clones compared with controls. Nonetheless, affected clones maintained a stable phenotype and normal in vitro functions. These results confirm that RV-mediated gene transfer for ADA-SCID is safe, and provide crucial information for the development of future gene therapy protocols. The trials described herein have been registered at http://www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT00598481 and #NCT00599781.
Tipologia CRIS:
Articolo su rivista
Keywords:
Adenosine Deaminase/deficiency/*genetics Antigens; CD34 Cells; Cultured Gene Expression Profiling *Gene Therapy Gene Transfer Techniques Genetic Vectors/*therapeutic use Humans Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis Purines/metabolism RNA; Messenger/genetics/metabolism Receptors; Antigen; T-Cell/genetics/immunology/metabolism Retroviridae/*genetics Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction Severe Combined Immunodeficiency/enzymology/genetics/*therapy T-Lymphocytes/metabolism/*pathology Transduction; Genetic Tumor Markers; Biological/genetics Virus Integration
Elenco autori:
B., Cassani; E., Montini; Maruggi, Giulietta; A., Ambrosi; M., Mirolo; S., Selleri; E., Biral; I., Frugnoli; V., Hernandez Trujillo; C., Di Serio; M. G., Roncarolo; L., Naldini; Mavilio, Fulvio; A., Aiuti
Link alla scheda completa:
https://iris.unimore.it/handle/11380/639569
Pubblicato in:
BLOOD
Journal
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