Sadelain M, Wang C H, Antoniou M, Grosveld F, Mulligan R C
Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge 02142-1479, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1995 Jul 18;92(15):6728-32. doi: 10.1073/pnas.92.15.6728.
Retrovirus-mediated gene transfer into hematopoietic cells may provide a means of treating both inherited and acquired diseases involving hematopoietic cells. Implementation of this approach for disorders resulting from mutations affecting the beta-globin gene (e.g., beta-thalassemia and sickle cell anemia), however, has been hampered by the inability to generate recombinant viruses able to efficiently and faithfully transmit the necessary sequences for appropriate gene expression. We have addressed this problem by carefully examining the interactions between retroviral and beta-globin gene sequences which affect vector transmission, stability, and expression. First, we examined the transmission properties of a large number of different recombinant proviral genomes which vary both in the precise nature of vector, beta-globin structural gene, and locus control region (LCR) core sequences incorporated and in the placement and orientation of those sequences. Through this analysis, we identified one specific vector, termed M beta 6L, which carries both the human beta-globin gene and core elements HS2, HS3, and HS4 from the LCR and faithfully transmits recombinant proviral sequences to cells with titers greater than 10(6) per ml. Populations of murine erythroleukemia (MEL) cells transduced by this virus expressed levels of human beta-globin transcript which, on a per gene copy basis, were 78% of the levels detected in an MEL-derived cell line, Hu11, which carries human chromosome 11, the site of the beta-globin locus. Analysis of individual transduced MEL cell clones, however, indicated that, while expression was detected in every clone tested (n = 17), the levels of human beta-globin treatment varied between 4% and 146% of the levels in Hu11. This clonal variation in expression levels suggests that small beta-globin LCR sequences may not provide for as strict chromosomal position-independent expression of beta-globin as previously suspected, at least in the context of retrovirus-mediated gene transfer.
逆转录病毒介导的基因转移至造血细胞可能为治疗涉及造血细胞的遗传性和获得性疾病提供一种方法。然而,对于由影响β-珠蛋白基因的突变所导致的疾病(例如β-地中海贫血和镰状细胞贫血),实施这种方法一直受到阻碍,原因是无法产生能够高效且忠实地传递适当基因表达所需序列的重组病毒。我们通过仔细研究影响载体传递、稳定性和表达的逆转录病毒与β-珠蛋白基因序列之间的相互作用来解决这个问题。首先,我们检查了大量不同重组原病毒基因组的传递特性,这些基因组在整合的载体、β-珠蛋白结构基因和基因座控制区(LCR)核心序列的精确性质以及这些序列的位置和方向方面均有所不同。通过这项分析,我们鉴定出一种特定的载体,称为Mβ6L,它携带人类β-珠蛋白基因以及来自LCR的核心元件HS2、HS3和HS4,并以每毫升大于10^6的滴度将重组原病毒序列忠实地传递给细胞。由这种病毒转导的小鼠红白血病(MEL)细胞群体表达的人类β-珠蛋白转录本水平,以每个基因拷贝为基础,是在携带人类11号染色体(β-珠蛋白基因座所在位点)的MEL衍生细胞系Hu11中检测到的水平的78%。然而,对单个转导的MEL细胞克隆的分析表明,虽然在每个测试克隆(n = 17)中都检测到了表达,但人类β-珠蛋白的表达水平在Hu11中水平的4%至146%之间变化。这种表达水平的克隆变异表明,至少在逆转录病毒介导的基因转移的背景下,小的β-珠蛋白LCR序列可能无法像先前怀疑的那样提供严格的β-珠蛋白染色体位置非依赖性表达。