4.7 Article

In vivo enrichment of genetically manipulated platelets for murine hemophilia B gene therapy

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELLULAR PHYSIOLOGY
Volume 236, Issue 1, Pages 354-365

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcp.29861

Keywords

drug selection; gene therapy; hemophilia B; platelet-targeted

Funding

  1. Bayer Hemophilia Foundation
  2. National Institutes of Health, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute grant [HL-102035]
  3. Program of New Century Excellent Talents in Fujian Province University [2016B032]
  4. Backbone Talent Training Project of Fujian Provincial Health Commission [2019-ZQN-42]
  5. Joint Funds for the Innovation of Science and Technology in Fujian Province [2016Y9029]
  6. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81500158]

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The study demonstrated that using the MGMT-mediated drug selection system in platelet-targeted FIX gene therapy significantly enhanced therapeutic platelet-FIX expression in FIXnull mice, resulting in sustained phenotypic correction and immune tolerance. The treated animals showed a significant increase in FIX antigen and activity posttreatment, with improved clotting time and immune response compared to FIXnull controls.
Our previous studies have demonstrated that platelet-targeted factor IX (FIX) gene therapy can introduce sustained platelet-FIX expression in hemophilia B (FIXnull) mice. In this study, we aimed to enhance platelet-FIX expression in FIXnull mice with O-6-methylguanine-DNA-methyltransferase (MGMT)-mediated in vivo drug selection of transduced cells under nonmyeloablative preconditioning. We constructed a novel lentiviral vector (2bF9/MGMT lentivirus vector), which harbors dual genes, the FIX gene driven by the alpha IIb promoter (2bF9) and the MGMT P140K gene under the murine stem cell virus promoter. Platelet-FIX expression in FIXnull mice was introduced by 2bF9/MGMT-mediated hematopoietic stem cell transduction and transplantation. The 2bF9/MGMT-transduced cells were effectively enriched after drug selection by O-6-benzylguanine/1,3-bis-2-chloroethyl-1-nitrosourea. There were a 2.9-fold higher FIX antigen and a 3.7-fold higher FIX activity in platelets, respectively, posttreatment compared with pretreatment. When a 6-hr tail bleeding test was used to grade the bleeding phenotype, the clotting time in treated animals was 2.6 +/- 0.5 hr. In contrast, none of the FIXnull control mice were able to clot within 6 hr. Notably, none of the recipients developed anti-FIX antibodies after gene therapy. One of four recipients developed a low titer of inhibitors when challenged with rhF9 together with adjuvant. In contrast, all FIXnull controls developed inhibitors after the same challenge. Anti-FIX immunoglobulin G were barely detectable in recipients (1.08 +/- 0.54 mu g/ml), an 875-fold lower level than in the FIXnull controls. Our data demonstrate that using the MGMT-mediated drug selection system in 2bF9 gene therapy can significantly enhance therapeutic platelet-FIX expression, resulting in sustained phenotypic correction and immune tolerance in FIXnull mice.

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