Sickle cell disease (SCD) is due to a mutation in the O-globin gene causing production of the toxic sickle hemoglobin (HbS; ex2OS2). Transplantation of autologous hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) transduced with lentiviral vectors (LVs) expressing an anti-sickling O-globin (OAS) is a promising treatment; however, it is only partially effective, and patients still present elevated HbS levels. Here, we developed a bifunctional LV expressing OAS3-globin and an artificial microRNA (amiRNA) specifically downregulating OS-globin expression with the aim of reducing HbS levels and favoring OAS3 incorporation into Hb tetramers. Efficient transduction of SCD HSPCs by the bifunctional LV led to a substantial decrease of OS-globin transcripts in HSPC-derived erythroid cells, a significant reduction of HbS+ red cells, and effective correction of the sickling phenotype, outperforming OAS gene addition and BCL11A gene silencing strategies. The bifunctional LV showed a standard integration profile, and neither HSPC viability, engraftment, and multilineage differentiation nor the erythroid transcriptome and miRNAome were affected by the treatment, confirming the safety of this therapeutic strategy. In conclusion, the combination of gene addition and gene silencing strategies can improve the efficacy of current LV-based therapeutic approaches without increasing the mutagenic vector load, thus representing a novel treatment for SCD.

Novel lentiviral vectors for gene therapy of sickle cell disease combining gene addition and gene silencing strategies / Brusson, Mégane; Chalumeau, Anne; Martinucci, Pierre; Romano, Oriana; Felix, Tristan; Poletti, Valentina; Scaramuzza, Samantha; Ramadier, Sophie; Masson, Cecile; Ferrari, Giuliana; Mavilio, Fulvio; Cavazzana, Marina; Amendola, Mario; Miccio, Annarita. - In: MOLECULAR THERAPY NUCLEIC ACIDS. - ISSN 2162-2531. - 32:(2023), pp. 229-246. [10.1016/j.omtn.2023.03.012]

Novel lentiviral vectors for gene therapy of sickle cell disease combining gene addition and gene silencing strategies

Ferrari, Giuliana;
2023-01-01

Abstract

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is due to a mutation in the O-globin gene causing production of the toxic sickle hemoglobin (HbS; ex2OS2). Transplantation of autologous hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) transduced with lentiviral vectors (LVs) expressing an anti-sickling O-globin (OAS) is a promising treatment; however, it is only partially effective, and patients still present elevated HbS levels. Here, we developed a bifunctional LV expressing OAS3-globin and an artificial microRNA (amiRNA) specifically downregulating OS-globin expression with the aim of reducing HbS levels and favoring OAS3 incorporation into Hb tetramers. Efficient transduction of SCD HSPCs by the bifunctional LV led to a substantial decrease of OS-globin transcripts in HSPC-derived erythroid cells, a significant reduction of HbS+ red cells, and effective correction of the sickling phenotype, outperforming OAS gene addition and BCL11A gene silencing strategies. The bifunctional LV showed a standard integration profile, and neither HSPC viability, engraftment, and multilineage differentiation nor the erythroid transcriptome and miRNAome were affected by the treatment, confirming the safety of this therapeutic strategy. In conclusion, the combination of gene addition and gene silencing strategies can improve the efficacy of current LV-based therapeutic approaches without increasing the mutagenic vector load, thus representing a novel treatment for SCD.
2023
MT: Non-coding RNAs
gene addition
gene silencing
gene therapy
lentiviral vectors
microRNA
sickle cell disease
βs silencing
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11768/162018
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