Nongenotoxic antibody-drug conjugate conditioning enables safe and effective platelet gene therapy of hemophilia A mice.
Chunyan GaoJocelyn A SchroederFeng XueWeiqing JingYuanhua CaiAmelia ScheckSaravanan SubramaniamSridhar RaoHartmut WeilerAgnieszka D CzechowiczQizhen ShiPublished in: Blood advances (2020)
Gene therapy offers the potential to cure hemophilia A (HA). We have shown that hematopoietic stem cell (HSC)-based platelet-specific factor VIII (FVIII) (2bF8) gene therapy can produce therapeutic protein and induce antigen-specific immune tolerance in HA mice, even in the presence of inhibitory antibodies. For HSC-based gene therapy, traditional preconditioning using cytotoxic chemotherapy or total body irradiation (TBI) has been required. The potential toxicity associated with TBI or chemotherapy is a deterrent that may prevent patients with HA, a nonmalignant disease, from agreeing to such a protocol. Here, we describe targeted nongenotoxic preconditioning for 2bF8 gene therapy utilizing a hematopoietic cell-specific antibody-drug conjugate (ADC), which consists of saporin conjugated to CD45.2- and CD117-targeting antibodies. We found that a combination of CD45.2- and CD117-targeting ADC preconditioning was effective for engrafting 2bF8-transduced HSCs and was favorable for platelet lineage reconstitution. Two thirds of HA mice that received 2bF8 lentivirus-transduced HSCs under (CD45.2+CD117)-targeting ADC conditioning maintained sustained therapeutic levels of platelet FVIII expression. When CD8-targeting ADC was supplemented, chimerism and platelet FVIII expression were significantly increased, with long-term sustained platelet FVIII expression in all primary and secondary recipients. Importantly, immune tolerance was induced and hemostasis was restored in a tail-bleeding test, and joint bleeding also was effectively prevented in a needle-induced knee joint injury model in HA mice after 2bF8 gene therapy. In summary, we show for the first time efficient engraftment of gene-modified HSCs without genotoxic conditioning. The combined cocktail ADC-mediated hematopoietic cell-targeted nongenotoxic preconditioning that we developed is highly effective and favorable for platelet-specific gene therapy in HA mice.
Keyphrases
- risk assessment
- gene therapy
- cancer therapy
- high fat diet induced
- poor prognosis
- traumatic brain injury
- diffusion weighted imaging
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- diffusion weighted
- drug delivery
- randomized controlled trial
- hematopoietic stem cell
- diabetic rats
- squamous cell carcinoma
- oxidative stress
- cerebral ischemia
- bone marrow
- gene expression
- cell therapy
- magnetic resonance imaging
- insulin resistance
- high glucose
- photodynamic therapy
- locally advanced
- long non coding rna
- wild type
- metabolic syndrome
- genome wide
- radiation induced
- type diabetes
- severe traumatic brain injury
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- blood brain barrier
- brain injury
- amino acid
- drug induced
- genome wide identification