Literature DB >> 12200677

Persisting multilineage transgene expression in the clonal progeny of a hematopoietic stem cell.

Z Li1, B Fehse, B Schiedlmeier, J Düllmann, O Frank, A R Zander, W Ostertag, C Baum.   

Abstract

Many applications of hematopoietic gene therapy require selection for clones with active transgene expression. However, it was unclear whether the clonal progeny of a retrovirally transduced hematopoietic stem cell would be capable of maintaining transgene expression through serial repopulation and multilineage differentiation. Such investigations require simultaneous analyses of clonality, multilineage activity and transgene copy numbers. Using a mouse model, the present study demonstrates that a single hematopoietic stem cell expressing a marker gene from one or two insertions of a simple retroviral vector actively maintains multilineage transgene expression in the vast majority (80-99%) of bone marrow and peripheral blood cells. Gene expression persisted through serial transplantations for at least 97 weeks post gene transfer and was observed in the lymphoid (B, T and NK cells), myeloid (CD11b(+), Gr-1(+)), erythroid (Ter119(+), mature red blood cells) and megakaryocytic (as indicated by platelets) progeny. Therefore, a single immunoselection for hematopoietic stem cells expressing the transgene in vivo was sufficient to establish a completely chimeric hematopoiesis. These observations imply that the retroviral vectors used in this study contain cis-elements that mediate expression through massive clonal expansion and multilineage differentiation, provided the insertion occurred in genetic loci permissive for expression in hematopoietic stem cells.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12200677     DOI: 10.1038/sj.leu.2402619

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Leukemia        ISSN: 0887-6924            Impact factor:   11.528


  3 in total

1.  Retroviral vector insertion sites associated with dominant hematopoietic clones mark "stemness" pathways.

Authors:  Olga S Kustikova; Hartmut Geiger; Zhixiong Li; Martijn H Brugman; Stuart M Chambers; Chad A Shaw; Karin Pike-Overzet; Dick de Ridder; Frank J T Staal; Gottfried von Keudell; Kerstin Cornils; Kalpana Jekumar Nattamai; Ute Modlich; Gerard Wagemaker; Margaret A Goodell; Boris Fehse; Christopher Baum
Journal:  Blood       Date:  2006-11-21       Impact factor: 22.113

2.  HOXB4's road map to stem cell expansion.

Authors:  Bernhard Schiedlmeier; Ana Cristina Santos; Ana Ribeiro; Natalia Moncaut; Dietrich Lesinski; Herbert Auer; Karl Kornacker; Wolfram Ostertag; Christopher Baum; Moises Mallo; Hannes Klump
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2007-10-16       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Stem cell marking with promotor-deprived self-inactivating retroviral vectors does not lead to induced clonal imbalance.

Authors:  Kerstin Cornils; Claudia Lange; Axel Schambach; Martijn H Brugman; Regine Nowak; Michael Lioznov; Christopher Baum; Boris Fehse
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2008-11-11       Impact factor: 11.454

  3 in total

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