Lutzko C, Kruth S, Abrams-Ogg A C, Lau K, Li L, Clark B R, Ruedy C, Nanji S, Foster R, Kohn D, Shull R, Dubé I D
Department of Laboratory Medicine, Sunnybrook Health Science Centre, and the Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Blood. 1999 Mar 15;93(6):1895-905.
Canine alpha-L-iduronidase (alpha-ID) deficiency, a model of the human storage disorder mucopolysaccharidosis type I (MPS I), is an ideal system in which to evaluate the clinical benefit of genetically corrected hematopoietic stem cells. We performed adoptive transfer of genetically corrected autologous hematopoietic cells in dogs with alpha-ID deficiency. Large volume marrow collections were performed on five alpha-ID-deficient dogs. Marrow mononuclear cells in long-term marrow cultures (LTMCs) were exposed on three occasions during 3 weeks of culture to retroviral vectors bearing the normal canine alpha-ID cDNA. Transduced LTMC cells from deficient dogs expressed enzymatically active alpha-ID at 10 to 200 times the levels seen in normal dogs. An average of 32% of LTMC-derived clonogenic hematopoietic cells were provirus positive by polymerase chain reaction and about half of these expressed alpha-ID. Approximately 10(7) autologous gene-modified LTMC cells/kg were infused into nonmyeloablated recipients. Proviral DNA was detected in up to 10% of individual marrow-derived hematopoietic colonies and in 0.01% to 1% of blood and marrow leukocytes at up to 2 to 3 years postinfusion. Despite good evidence for engraftment of provirally marked cells, neither alpha-ID enzyme nor alpha-ID transcripts were detected in any dog. We evaluated immune responses against alpha-ID and transduced cells. Humoral responses to alpha-ID and serum components of the culture media (fetal bovine and horse sera and bovine serum albumin) were identified by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Cellular immune responses to autologous alpha-ID but not neo(r) transduced cells were demonstrated by lymphocyte proliferation assays. To abrogate potential immune phenomena, four affected dogs received posttransplant cyclosporine A. Whereas immune responses were dampened in these dogs, alpha-ID activity remained undetectable. In none of the dogs engrafted with genetically corrected cells was there evidence for clinical improvement. Our data suggest that, whereas the alpha-ID cDNA may be transferred and maintained in approximately 5% of hematopoietic progenitors, the potential of this approach appears limited by the levels of provirally derived enzyme that are expressed in vivo and by the host's response to cultured and transduced hematopoietic cells expressing foreign proteins.
犬α-L-艾杜糖醛酸酶(α-ID)缺乏症是人类贮积病黏多糖贮积症I型(MPS I)的一种模型,是评估基因校正造血干细胞临床益处的理想系统。我们对患有α-ID缺乏症的犬进行了基因校正自体造血细胞的过继转移。对5只α-ID缺乏症犬进行了大容量骨髓采集。长期骨髓培养(LTMC)中的骨髓单个核细胞在培养的3周内分三次暴露于携带正常犬α-ID cDNA的逆转录病毒载体。来自缺陷犬的转导LTMC细胞表达的具有酶活性的α-ID水平是正常犬的10至200倍。通过聚合酶链反应,平均32%的LTMC来源的克隆造血细胞前病毒呈阳性,其中约一半表达α-ID。将约10⁷个自体基因修饰的LTMC细胞/kg注入未进行清髓的受体。在输注后长达2至3年的时间里,在高达10%的单个骨髓来源的造血集落以及0.01%至1%的血液和骨髓白细胞中检测到前病毒DNA。尽管有充分证据表明前病毒标记细胞已植入,但在任何一只犬中均未检测到α-ID酶或α-ID转录本。我们评估了针对α-ID和转导细胞的免疫反应。通过酶联免疫吸附测定法鉴定了对α-ID和培养基血清成分(胎牛血清、马血清和牛血清白蛋白)的体液反应。通过淋巴细胞增殖试验证明了对自体α-ID而非新霉素转导细胞的细胞免疫反应。为了消除潜在的免疫现象,4只患病犬在移植后接受了环孢素A治疗。虽然这些犬的免疫反应受到抑制,但仍未检测到α-ID活性。在任何一只植入基因校正细胞的犬中均未发现临床改善的证据。我们的数据表明,虽然α-ID cDNA可能转移并保留在约5%的造血祖细胞中,但这种方法的潜力似乎受到体内表达的前病毒衍生酶水平以及宿主对表达外源蛋白的培养和转导造血细胞的反应的限制。