Optimization of Fibronectin-Assisted Retroviral Gene Transfer into Human CD34+Hematopoietic Cells
- 10 December 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in Human Gene Therapy
- Vol. 8 (18) , 2193-2206
- https://doi.org/10.1089/hum.1997.8.18-2193
Abstract
Efficient retroviral gene transfer into hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells can be achieved by co-localizing retrovirus and target cells on specific adhesion domains of recombinant fibronectin (FN) fragments. In this paper, we further optimize this technology for human CD34+ cells. Investigating the role of cytokine prestimulation in retrovirus-mediated gene transfer on plates coated with the recombinant FN CH-296 revealed that prestimulation of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF)-mobilized peripheral blood (PB) CD34+ cells was essential to achieve efficient gene transfer into clonogenic cells. The highest gene transfer occurred by prestimulating PB CD34+ cells for 40 hr with a combination of stem cell factor (SCF), G-CSF, and megakaryocyte growth and development factor (MGDF) prior to retroviral infection on CH-296. Surprisingly, a prolonged simultaneous exposure of primary CD34+ PB cells to retrovirus and cytokines in the presence of CH-296 lowered the gene transfer efficiency. Gene transfer into cytokine prestimulated CD34+ bone marrow (BM) cells was not influenced by increasing the coating concentrations of a recombinant FN fragment, CH-296, nor was it adversely influenced by increasing the number of CD34+ target cells, suggesting that the amount of retroviral particles present in the supernatant was not a limiting factor for transduction of CD34+ BM cells on CH-296-coated plates. The polycation Polybrene was not required for efficient transduction of hematopoietic cells in the presence of CH-296. Furthermore, we demonstrated that repeated exposure of CH-296 to retrovirus containing supernatant, called preloading, can be employed to concentrate the amount of retroviral particles bound to CH-296. These findings establish a simple and short clinically applicable transduction protocol that targets up to 68% of BM or G-CSF-mobilized PB CD34+ cells and is capable of genetically modifying up to 17% of CD34+CD38–/dim PB cells. Fibronectin-assisted retroviral gene transfer greatly enhances the transduction of mammalian cells adherent to specific adhesion domains of fibronectin. Here, we developed a clinically applicable transduction protocol that reproducibly demonstrated high-efficiency gene transfer into hematopoietic CD34+ cells from bone marrow or cytokine-mobilized peripheral blood. The approach to target hematopoietic progenitor cells may be useful in human gene therapy applications, particularly where correction of a genetic deficiency is not required.Keywords
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