Baboon envelope LVs efficiently transduced human adult, fetal, and progenitor T cells and corrected SCID-X1 T-cell deficiency.
Ornellie BernadinFouzia AmiracheAnais Girard-GagnepainRanjita Devi MoirangthemCamille LévyKuiying MaCaroline CostaDidier NègreChristian ReimannDavid FenardAgata CieslakVahid AsnafiHanem SadekRana MhaidlyMarina CavazzanaChantal Lagresle-PeyrouFrançois-Loïc CossetIsabelle AndréEls VerhoeyenPublished in: Blood advances (2020)
T cells represent a valuable tool for treating cancers and infectious and inherited diseases; however, they are mainly short-lived in vivo. T-cell therapies would strongly benefit from gene transfer into long-lived persisting naive T cells or T-cell progenitors. Here we demonstrate that baboon envelope glycoprotein pseudotyped lentiviral vectors (BaEV-LVs) far outperformed other LV pseudotypes for transduction of naive adult and fetal interleukin-7-stimulated T cells. Remarkably, BaEV-LVs efficiently transduced thymocytes and T-cell progenitors generated by culture of CD34+ cells on Delta-like ligand 4 (Dll4). Upon NOD/SCIDγC-/- engraftment, high transduction levels (80%-90%) were maintained in all T-cell subpopulations. Moreover, T-cell lineage reconstitution was accelerated in NOD/SCIDγC-/- recipients after T-cell progenitor injection compared with hematopoietic stem cell transplantation. Furthermore, γC-encoding BaEV-LVs very efficiently transduced Dll4-generated T-cell precursors from a patient with X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID-X1), which fully rescued T-cell development in vitro. These results indicate that BaEV-LVs are valuable tools for the genetic modification of naive T cells, which are important targets for gene therapy. Moreover, they allowed for the generation of gene-corrected T-cell progenitors that rescued SCID-X1 T-cell development in vitro. Ultimately, the coinjection of LV-corrected T-cell progenitors and hematopoietic stem cells might accelerate T-cell reconstitution in immunodeficient patients.
Keyphrases
- gene therapy
- stem cells
- genome wide
- hiv infected
- copy number
- induced apoptosis
- end stage renal disease
- endothelial cells
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- bone marrow
- prognostic factors
- acute myeloid leukemia
- cell fate
- gene expression
- cell proliferation
- case report
- cell cycle arrest
- transcription factor
- childhood cancer
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- early onset
- ultrasound guided
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- oxidative stress
- kidney transplantation
- patient reported outcomes
- cell death
- dna methylation
- pluripotent stem cells
- signaling pathway
- hematopoietic stem cell
- genome wide analysis
- drug induced