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Neonatal umbilical cord blood transplantation halts skeletal disease progression in the murine model of MPS-I

Authors :
Azario, I
Pievani, A
Del Priore, F
Antolini, L
Santi, L
Corsi, A
Cardinale, L
Sawamoto, K
Kubaski, F
Gentner, B
Bernardo, M
Valsecchi, M
Riminucci, M
Tomatsu, S
Aiuti, A
Biondi, A
Serafini, M
SANTI, LUDOVICA
Bernardo, ME
Valsecchi, MG
Azario, I
Pievani, A
Del Priore, F
Antolini, L
Santi, L
Corsi, A
Cardinale, L
Sawamoto, K
Kubaski, F
Gentner, B
Bernardo, M
Valsecchi, M
Riminucci, M
Tomatsu, S
Aiuti, A
Biondi, A
Serafini, M
SANTI, LUDOVICA
Bernardo, ME
Valsecchi, MG
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Umbilical cord blood (UCB) is a promising source of stem cells to use in early haematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) approaches for several genetic diseases that can be diagnosed at birth. Mucopolysaccharidosis type I (MPS-I) is a progressive multi-system disorder caused by deficiency of lysosomal enzyme α-L-iduronidase, and patients treated with allogeneic HSCT at the onset have improved outcome, suggesting to administer such therapy as early as possible. Given that the best characterized MPS-I murine model is an immunocompetent mouse, we here developed a transplantation system based on murine UCB. With the final aim of testing the therapeutic efficacy of UCB in MPS-I mice transplanted at birth, we first defined the features of murine UCB cells and demonstrated that they are capable of multi-lineage haematopoietic repopulation of myeloablated adult mice similarly to bone marrow cells. We then assessed the effectiveness of murine UCB cells transplantation in busulfan-conditioned newborn MPS-I mice. Twenty weeks after treatment, iduronidase activity was increased in visceral organs of MPS-I animals, glycosaminoglycans storage was reduced, and skeletal phenotype was ameliorated. This study explores a potential therapy for MPS-I at a very early stage in life and represents a novel model to test UCB-based transplantation approaches for various diseases.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1308923229
Document Type :
Electronic Resource