| Literature DB >> 21994741 |
Ali Nowrouzi1, Hanno Glimm, Christof von Kalle, Manfred Schmidt.
Abstract
The curative potential of retroviral vectors for somatic gene therapy has been demonstrated impressively in several clinical trials leading to sustained long-term correction of the underlying genetic defect. Preclinical studies and clinical monitoring of gene modified hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells in patients have shown that biologically relevant vector induced side effects, ranging from in vitro immortalization to clonal dominance and oncogenesis in vivo, accompany therapeutic efficiency of integrating retroviral gene transfer systems. Most importantly, it has been demonstrated that the genotoxic potential is not identical among all retroviral vector systems designed for clinical application. Large scale viral integration site determination has uncovered significant differences in the target site selection of retrovirus subfamilies influencing the propensity for inducing genetic alterations in the host genome. In this review we will summarize recent insights gained on the mechanisms of insertional mutagenesis based on intrinsic target site selection of different retrovirus families. We will also discuss examples of side effects occurring in ongoing human gene therapy trials and future prospectives in the field.Entities:
Keywords: Leukemia; common insertion sites; gene therapy; insertional mutagenesis; retroviral integration; retroviral vectors; vector genotoxicity
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21994741 PMCID: PMC3185758 DOI: 10.3390/v3050429
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Viruses ISSN: 1999-4915 Impact factor: 5.048
Integration pattern of different retroviral vectors.
| HIV | [ | |||
| SIV | [ | |||
| MLV | [ | |||
| ALV | [ | |||
| ASLV | [ | |||
| PFV | [ | |||
| EIAV | [ | |||
| HTLV-1 | [ |
strong preference;
no preference;
weak preferences.
Figure 1Integration site selection of retroviral based vectors in the cellular genome. (A) Analysis of individual vectors to target sites upstream and downstream of the transcription start site (TSS) at a 2.5 kb window size relative to the random control, which was set arbitrarily to 1 show that murine leukemia virus (MLV) based vectors have the strongest preference to integrate in close proximity to TSS. Prototype foamy virus (PFV) based vectors integrate at a rate approximately three- to four-fold higher than the expected random value, while HIV-based vectors avoid these regions; (B) The preference to integrate into transcribed regions of genes is strongest for HIV based vectors followed by MLV vectors, which show weaker preferences, while PFV vectors do not show any preferences for target site selection in genes. Their integration preference towards genes is similar to what would be expected if target site selection would be random; (C) Frequency of retroviral vectors to integrate in the vicinity of CpG islands matched to the random control, which was set arbitrarily to 1 is dramatically increased with MLV based vectors. HIV and PFV vectors do not show any strong preferences for integration near to CpG islands (modified from Nowrouzi et al. [11]).
Figure 2Analyzing clonal dynamics and insertional induced side effects by retroviral integration site analyzes and next generation sequencing.
Figure 3Retroviral vectors may induce mutations in multiple ways by integration of the retrovirus in the host genome. (A, B) Mutagenic proviral insertions in most reported cases induce an activation of neighboring genes by enhancer elements present within the wildtype LTR. Such “enhancer insertions” can induce gene activation from distances up to 100 kb. (C, D) In case of SIN-type retroviral vectors strong internal promoters driving transgene expression may induce deregulation of genes in close proximity similar to so-called “promotor insertions” which result in viral-host gene-fusion transcripts. (E) Genotoxic side effects resulting from retroviral integration sites leading to inactivation of cellular genes may be induced by viral insertion within a host gene leading to truncated non functional transcripts.
Figure 4Retroviral integration into common insertion sites in clinical gene therapy trials. (A) Clustering of retroviral integration sites (RIS) within clones sharing integrations in MDS1-EVI1, PRDM16 and SETBP1 in the X-CGD clinical trial identified by linear amplification-mediated PCR (LAM-PCR) (modified from Ott et al. [113]). (B) Clinical monitoring of retroviral gene corrected hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSC) by LAM-PCR and 454 sequencing in two patients from the WAS gene therapy trial over time reveal multiple clones sharing insertion sites into common integration sites located near genes previously known to induce malignant clonal expansion. For measuring clonal contribution to hematopoiesis over time at every time point analyzed, sequence counts for all RIS contributing to an individual common insertion sites (CIS) derived from PBL and BM were clustered and related to total sequence count at the respective time point (modified from Boztug et al. [114]).