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Preclinical Testing of the Safety and Tolerability of Lentiviral Vector-Mediated Above-Normal Alpha-L-Iduronidase Expression in Murine and Human Hematopoietic Cells Using Toxicology and Biodistribution Good Laboratory Practice Studies

Authors :
Ilaria Visigalli
Francesca Cecere
Michela Vezzoli
Rob Wynn
Franck Chanut
Francesca Sanvito
Eugenio Montini
Andrea Calabria
Patrizia Cristofori
Luigi Naldini
Giulio Spinozzi
Fabrizio Benedicenti
Alessandra Biffi
Francesca Ferro
Stefania Delai
Visigalli, Ilaria
Delai, Stefania
Ferro, Francesca
Cecere, Francesca
Vezzoli, Michela
Sanvito, Francesca
Chanut, Franck
Benedicenti, Fabrizio
Spinozzi, Giulio
Wynn, Rob
Calabria, Andrea
Naldini, Luigi
Montini, Eugenio
Cristofori, Patrizia
Biffi, Alessandra
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Mary Ann Liebert Inc., 2016.

Abstract

In order to support the clinical application of hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) gene therapy for mucopolysaccharidosis I (MPS I), biosafety studies were conducted to assess the toxicity and tumorigenic potential, as well as the biodistribution of HSCs and progenitor cells (HSPCs) transduced with lentiviral vectors (LV) encoding the cDNA of the alpha-iduronidase (IDUA) gene, which is mutated in MPS I patients. To this goal, toxicology and biodistribution studies were conducted, employing Good Laboratory Practice principles. Vector integration site (IS) studies were applied in order to predict adverse consequences of vector gene transfer and to obtain HSC-related information. Overall, the results obtained in these studies provided robust evidence to support the safety and tolerability of high-efficiency LV-mediated gene transfer and above-normal IDUA enzyme expression in both murine and human HSPCs and their in vivo progeny. Taken together, these investigations provide essential safety data to support clinical testing of HSC gene therapy in MPS I patients. These studies also underline criticisms associated with the use of currently available models, and highlight the value of surrogate markers of tumorigenicity that may be further explored in the future. Notably, biological evidence supporting the efficacy of gene therapy on MPS I disease and its feasibility on patients' HSCs were also generated, employing clinical-grade LVs. Finally, the clonal contribution of LV-transduced HSPCs to hematopoiesis along serial transplantation was quantified in a minimum of 200-300 clones, with the different level of repopulating cells in primary recipients being reflected in the secondary.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bb9157974f50f5159b02168a6327b52f