Back to Search Start Over

No impact of lentiviral transduction on hematopoietic stem/progenitor cell telomere length or gene expression in the rhesus macaque model.

Authors :
Sellers SE
Dumitriu B
Morgan MJ
Hughes WM
Wu CO
Raghavarchari N
Yang Y
Uchida N
Tisdale JF
An DS
Chen IS
Hematti P
Donahue RE
Larochelle A
Young NS
Calado RT
Dunbar CE
Source :
Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy [Mol Ther] 2014 Jan; Vol. 22 (1), pp. 52-8. Date of Electronic Publication: 2013 Jul 18.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The occurrence of clonal perturbations and leukemia in patients transplanted with gamma-retroviral (RV) vector-transduced autologous hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) has stimulated extensive investigation, demonstrating that proviral insertions may perturb adjacent proto-oncogene expression. Although enhancer-deleted lentiviruses are less likely to result in insertional oncogenesis, there is evidence that they may perturb transcript splicing, and one patient with a benign clonal expansion of lentivirally transduced HPSC has been reported. The rhesus macaque model provides an opportunity for informative long-term analysis to ask whether transduction impacts on long-term HSPC properties. We used two techniques to examine whether lentivirally transduced HSPCs from eight rhesus macaques transplanted 1-13.5 years previously are perturbed at a population level, comparing telomere length as a measure of replicative history and gene expression profile of vector positive versus vector negative cells. There were no differences in telomere lengths between sorted GFP+ and GFP- blood cells, suggesting that lentiviral (LV) transduction did not globally disrupt replicative patterns. Bone marrow GFP+ and GF- CD34+ cells showed no differences in gene expression using unsupervised and principal component analysis. These studies did not uncover any global long-term perturbation of proliferation, differentiation, or other important functional parameters of transduced HSPCs in the rhesus macaque model.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1525-0024
Volume :
22
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
23863881
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/mt.2013.168