| Literature DB >> 29325430 |
Constantinos C Loucari1,2, Petros Patsali1, Thamar B van Dijk3, Coralea Stephanou1, Panayiota Papasavva1,2, Maria Zanti1,2, Ryo Kurita4, Yukio Nakamura4, Soteroulla Christou5, Maria Sitarou5, Sjaak Philipsen3, Carsten W Lederer1,2, Marina Kleanthous1,2.
Abstract
The β-hemoglobinopathies sickle cell anemia and β-thalassemia are the focus of many gene-therapy studies. A key disease parameter is the abundance of globin chains because it indicates the level of anemia, likely toxicity of excess or aberrant globins, and therapeutic potential of induced or exogenous β-like globins. Reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) allows versatile and inexpensive globin quantification, but commonly applied protocols suffer from long run times, high sample requirements, or inability to separate murine from human β-globin chains. The latter point is problematic for in vivo studies with gene-addition vectors in murine disease models and mouse/human chimeras. This study demonstrates HPLC-based measurements of globin expression (1) after differentiation of the commonly applied human umbilical cord blood-derived erythroid progenitor-2 cell line, (2) in erythroid progeny of CD34+ cells for the analysis of clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeats/Cas9-mediated disruption of the globin regulator BCL11A, and (3) of transgenic mice holding the human β-globin locus. At run times of 8 min for separation of murine and human β-globin chains as well as of human γ-globin chains, and with routine measurement of globin-chain ratios for 12 nL of blood (tested for down to 0.75 nL) or of 300,000 in vitro differentiated cells, the methods presented here and any variant-specific adaptations thereof will greatly facilitate evaluation of novel therapy applications for β-hemoglobinopathies.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR/Cas9; fetal hemoglobin; gene addition; high-performance liquid chromatography; thalassemia; β-hemoglobinopathy
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29325430 PMCID: PMC5806072 DOI: 10.1089/hgtb.2017.190
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Gene Ther Methods ISSN: 1946-6536 Impact factor: 2.396