| Literature DB >> 31737588 |
Frank J T Staal1, Alessandro Aiuti2,3, Marina Cavazzana4.
Abstract
Gene therapy using patient's own stem cells is rapidly becoming an alternative to allogeneic stem cell transplantation, especially when suitably compatible donors cannot be found. The advent of efficient virus-based methods for delivering therapeutic genes has enabled the development of genetic medicines for inherited disorders of the immune system, hemoglobinopathies, and a number of devastating metabolic diseases. Here, we briefly review the state of the art in the field, including gene editing approaches. A growing number of pediatric diseases can be successfully cured by hematopoietic stem-cell-based gene therapy.Entities:
Keywords: SCID; clinical trial; curative treatment; gene editing; gene therapy; lysosomal storage disorder; sickle cell disease; thalassemia
Year: 2019 PMID: 31737588 PMCID: PMC6834641 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2019.00443
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Figure 1Current methods for generating lentiviral vectors. Four plasmids (a transfer vector containing the therapeutic gene and viral long terminal repeats, a REV-containing plasmid, a GAG-POL encoding plasmid, and an envelope-encoding plasmid, most often VSV-G) into a packaging line that subsequently secretes replication-deficient lentiviral particles. The latter are purified and then tested in several efficacy and safety assays before clinical use.
Figure 2The principle of stem-cell-based gene therapy for pediatric diseases. CD34+ cells enriched for HSCs are harvested from the patients—either from bone marrow or (increasingly) from mobilized peripheral blood. The CD34+ cells are cultured in GMP laboratories with cytokines and viral vectors, harvested, and then subjected to a number of quality control steps prior to reinfusion into the patient. The cell product is often cryopreserved to allow time for quality control tests and the shipment of cells to clinical transplantation centers far from the production site. After reinfusion, HSCs find their niches, differentiate into mature blood cells, and thereby restore the clinical defect.
Ongoing clinical trials of gene therapy using autologous HSCs to treat inherited disorders in pediatric patients.
| SCID-X1 | LV | IL2RG | ( |
| ADA-SCID | LV | ADA | ( |
| Wiskott–Aldrich Syndrome | LV | WAS | ( |
| X-linked chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) | LV | Gp91phox | NCT01855685 |
| Leucocyte adhesion deficiency (LAD) | LV | CD18 | NCT03812263 |
| SCID due ARTEMIS defect | LV | DCLRE1C | NCT03538899 |
| Transfusion dependent β-thalassemia | LV | HBB | ( |
| Transfusion-dependent β-thalassemia | GE | HBB | NCT03728322 |
| Sickle cell disease | LV | HBB | ( |
| Fanconi anemia | LV | FANCA | NCT03157804 |
| Metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD) | LV | ARSA | ( |
| X-Adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD) | LV | ABCD1 | ( |
| Mucopolysaccharosidosis type I | LV | IDUA | NCT03488394 |
LV, lentiviral vector; GE, gene editing.
Figure 3Genome editing for gene deletion or gene repair. A nuclease (often CAS9 with a guide RNA as part of the CRISPR system) generates double-strand DNA breaks. If a donor template is not provided, NHEJ will generate mutations that typically lead to a loss-of-function mutation. This strategy is used (for example) to remove repressors of fetal hemoglobin. The other approach requires a donor sequence for repair and relies on HDR. The donor template is often provided by an AAV.