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TALEN-Mediated Gene Editing of HBG in Human Hematopoietic Stem Cells Leads to Therapeutic Fetal Hemoglobin Induction

Authors :
Irwin D. Bernstein
Julia G. Yang
Andrew M. Scharenberg
Christopher T. Lux
Olivier Negre
Sowmya Pattabhi
David A. Flowers
Kyle Jacoby
Mason P. Berger
Hans-Peter Kiem
Calvin Lee
Cynthia Nourigat
Olivier Humbert
David J. Rawlings
Source :
Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development, Vol 12, Iss, Pp 175-183 (2019), Molecular Therapy. Methods & Clinical Development
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2019.

Abstract

Elements within the γ-hemoglobin promoters (HBG1 and HBG2) function to bind transcription complexes that mediate repression of fetal hemoglobin expression. Sickle cell disease (SCD) subjects with a 13-bp deletion in the HBG1 promoter exhibit a clinically favorable hereditary persistence of fetal hemoglobin (HPFH) phenotype. We developed TALENs targeting the homologous HBG promoters to de-repress fetal hemoglobin. Transfection of human CD34+ cells with TALEN mRNA resulted in indel generation in HBG1 (43%) and HBG2 (74%) including the 13-bp HPFH deletion (∼6%). Erythroid differentiation of edited cells revealed a 4.6-fold increase in γ-hemoglobin expression as detected by HPLC. Assessment of TALEN-edited CD34+ cells in vivo in a humanized mouse model demonstrated sustained presence of indels in hematopoietic cells up to 24 weeks. Indel rates remained unchanged following secondary transplantation consistent with editing of long-term repopulating stem cells (LT-HSCs). Human γ-hemoglobin expressing F cells were detected by flow cytometry approximately 50% more frequently in edited animals compared to mock. Together, these findings demonstrate that TALEN-mediated indel generation in the γ-hemoglobin promoter leads to high levels of fetal hemoglobin expression in vitro and in vivo, suggesting that this approach can provide therapeutic benefit in patients with SCD or β-thalassemia.<br />Graphical Abstract

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23290501
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....88328bbfba6c955d8b512101ff385837