| Literature DB >> 33284949 |
Suk See De Ravin1, Julie Brault1, Ronald J Meis2, Linhong Li3, Narda Theobald1, Aylin C Bonifacino4, Hong Lei5, Taylor Q Liu1, Sherry Koontz1, Cristina Corsino1, Marissa A Zarakas1, Jigar V Desai1, Aaron B Clark2, Uimook Choi1, Mark E Metzger4, Kamille West5, Steven L Highfill5, Elizabeth Kang1, Douglas B Kuhns1, Michail S Lionakis1, David F Stroncek5, Cynthia E Dunbar4, John F Tisdale4, Robert E Donahue4, Gary A Dahl2, Harry L Malech1.
Abstract
Granulocytes from patients with chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) have dysfunctional phagocyte reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) oxidase that fails to generate sufficient antimicrobial reactive oxidative species. CGD patients with severe persistent fungal or bacterial infection who do not respond to antibiotic therapy may be given apheresis-derived allogeneic granulocyte transfusions from healthy volunteers to improve clearance of intractable infections. Allogeneic granulocyte donors are not HLA matched, so patients who receive the donor granulocyte products may develop anti-HLA alloimmunity. This not only precludes future use of allogeneic granulocytes in an alloimmunized CGD recipient, but increases the risk of graft failure of those recipients who go on to need an allogeneic bone marrow transplant. Here, we provide the first demonstration of efficient functional restoration of CGD patient apheresis granulocytes by messenger RNA (mRNA) electroporation using a scalable, Good Manufacturing Practice-compliant system to restore protein expression and NADPH oxidase function. Dose-escalating clinical-scale in vivo studies in a nonhuman primate model verify the feasibility, safety, and persistence in peripheral blood of infusions of mRNA-transfected autologous granulocyte-enriched apheresis cells, supporting this novel therapeutic approach as a potential nonalloimmunizing adjunct treatment of intractable infections in CGD patients.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33284949 PMCID: PMC7724899 DOI: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2020003224
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood Adv ISSN: 2473-9529