Concentrated RD114-pseudotyped MFGS-gp91phox vector achieves high levels of functional correction of the chronic granulomatous disease oxidase defect in NOD/SCID/ 2-microglobulin-/- repopulating mobilized human peripheral blood CD34+ cells
- 15 October 2003
- journal article
- Published by American Society of Hematology in Blood
- Vol. 102 (8) , 2789-2797
- https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2002-05-1482
Abstract
In previous studies amphotropic MFGS-gp91phox (murine onco-retrovirus vector) was used in a clinical trial of X-linked chronic granulomatous disease (X-CGD) gene therapy to achieve transient correction of oxidase activity in 0.1% of neutrophils. We later showed that transduced CD34+ peripheral blood stem cells (CD34+ PBSCs) from this trial transplanted into nonobese diabetic/severe combined immunodeficient (NOD/SCID) mice resulted in correction of only 2.5% of human neutrophils. However, higher rates of transduction into stem cells are required. In the current study we demonstrate that the same vector (MFGS-gp91phox) pseudo-typed with RD114 envelope in a 4-day culture/transduction regimen results in a 7-fold increase in correction of NOD/SCID mouse repopulating X-CGD CD34+ PBSCs (14%-22% corrected human neutrophils; human cell engraftment 13%-67%). This increase may result from high expression of receptor for RD114 that we demonstrate on CD34+CD38– stem cells. Using RD114-MFGS encoding cyan fluorescent protein to allow similar studies of normal CD34+ PBSCs, we show that progressively higher levels of gene marking of human neutrophils (67%-77%) can be achieved by prolongation of culture/transduction to 6 days, but with lower rates of human cell engraftment. Our data demonstrate the highest reported level of functional correction of any inherited metabolic disorder in human cells in vivo with the NOD/SCID mouse system using onco-retrovirus vector.Keywords
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Third-generation, self-inactivating gp91phoxlentivector corrects the oxidase defect in NOD/SCID mouse–repopulating peripheral blood–mobilized CD34+ cells from patients with X-linked chronic granulomatous diseaseBlood, 2002
- Optimization of Gene Transfer into Primitive Human Hematopoietic Cells of Granulocyte-Colony Stimulating Factor–Mobilized Peripheral Blood Using Low-Dose Cytokines and Comparison of a Gibbon Ape Leukemia Virus Versus an RD114-Pseudotyped Retroviral VectorHuman Gene Therapy, 2002
- Differential Transduction Efficiency of SCID-Repopulating Cells Derived from Umbilical Cord Blood and Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor-Mobilized Peripheral BloodHuman Gene Therapy, 2001
- Engraftment of NOD/SCID Mice with Human CD34+Cells Transduced by Concentrated Oncoretroviral Vector Particles Pseudotyped with the Feline Endogenous Retrovirus (RD114) Envelope ProteinJournal of Virology, 2001
- Treatment of Chronic Granulomatous Disease with Nonmyeloablative Conditioning and a T-Cell–Depleted Hematopoietic AllograftNew England Journal of Medicine, 2001
- MDR1 Gene Expression in NOD/SCID Repopulating Cells after Retroviral Gene Transfer under Clinically Relevant ConditionsMolecular Therapy, 2000
- Functional differences between transplantable human hematopoietic stem cells from fetal liver, cord blood, and adult marrowExperimental Hematology, 1999
- Progress in Gene Therapy for Chronic Granulomatous DiseaseThe Journal of Infectious Diseases, 1999
- Diagnosis of chronic granulomatous disease and of its mode of inheritance by dihydrorhodamine 123 and flow microcytofluorometryEuropean Journal of Pediatrics, 1991
- Characterization of the human cell line TE671Carcinogenesis: Integrative Cancer Research, 1989