Frederiksen Henriette Reventlow, Doehn Ulrik, Tveden-Nyborg Pernille, Freude Kristine K
Department of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Stem Cell Discovery, Novo Nordisk A/S, Måløv, Denmark.
Front Genome Ed. 2021 Jan 12;2:623717. doi: 10.3389/fgeed.2020.623717. eCollection 2020.
Neurological disorder is a general term used for diseases affecting the function of the brain and nervous system. Those include a broad range of diseases from developmental disorders (e.g., Autism) over injury related disorders (e.g., stroke and brain tumors) to age related neurodegeneration (e.g., Alzheimer's disease), affecting up to 1 billion people worldwide. For most of those disorders, no curative treatment exists leaving symptomatic treatment as the primary mean of alleviation. Human induced pluripotent stem cells (hiPSC) in combination with animal models have been instrumental to foster our understanding of underlying disease mechanisms in the brain. Of specific interest are patient derived hiPSC which allow for targeted gene editing in the cases of known mutations. Such personalized treatment would include (1) acquisition of primary cells from the patient, (2) reprogramming of those into hiPSC via non-integrative methods, (3) corrective intervention via CRISPR-Cas9 gene editing of mutations, (4) quality control to ensure successful correction and absence of off-target effects, and (5) subsequent transplantation of hiPSC or pre-differentiated precursor cells for cell replacement therapies. This would be the ideal scenario but it is time consuming and expensive. Therefore, it would be of great benefit if transplanted hiPSC could be modulated to become invisible to the recipient's immune system, avoiding graft rejection and allowing for allogenic transplantations. This review will focus on the current status of gene editing to generate non-immunogenic hiPSC and how these cells can be used to treat neurological disorders by using cell replacement therapy. By providing an overview of current limitations and challenges in stem cell replacement therapies and the treatment of neurological disorders, this review outlines how gene editing and non-immunogenic hiPSC can contribute and pave the road for new therapeutic advances. Finally, the combination of using non-immunogenic hiPSC and animal modeling will highlight the importance of models with translational value for safety efficacy testing; before embarking on human trials.
神经紊乱是一个通用术语,用于指影响大脑和神经系统功能的疾病。这些疾病包括从发育障碍(如自闭症)、损伤相关疾病(如中风和脑肿瘤)到与年龄相关的神经退行性疾病(如阿尔茨海默病)等广泛的疾病,全球多达10亿人受其影响。对于大多数此类疾病,不存在治愈性治疗方法,对症治疗是缓解症状的主要手段。人类诱导多能干细胞(hiPSC)与动物模型相结合,有助于我们了解大脑中潜在的疾病机制。特别令人感兴趣的是患者来源的hiPSC,在已知突变的情况下,它允许进行靶向基因编辑。这种个性化治疗将包括:(1)从患者获取原代细胞;(2)通过非整合方法将这些细胞重编程为hiPSC;(3)通过CRISPR-Cas9基因编辑对突变进行纠正干预;(4)质量控制以确保成功纠正且无脱靶效应;(5)随后移植hiPSC或预分化的前体细胞用于细胞替代疗法。这将是理想的情况,但既耗时又昂贵。因此,如果移植的hiPSC能够被调节,使其对受体的免疫系统不可见,避免移植排斥并允许进行同种异体移植,那将大有裨益。本综述将聚焦于通过基因编辑产生非免疫原性hiPSC的现状,以及如何利用这些细胞通过细胞替代疗法治疗神经紊乱。通过概述干细胞替代疗法和神经紊乱治疗中当前的局限性和挑战,本综述概述了基因编辑和非免疫原性hiPSC如何做出贡献并为新的治疗进展铺平道路。最后,使用非免疫原性hiPSC与动物建模相结合,将凸显具有转化价值的模型对于安全性疗效测试的重要性;在开展人体试验之前。