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Targeting a Pre-existing Anti-transgene T Cell Response for Effective Gene Therapy of MPS-I in the Mouse Model of the Disease

Authors :
Federica Deodato
Bernhard Gentner
Luigi Naldini
Silvia Gregori
Alessandra Biffi
Andrea Annoni
Cecilia Laudisa
Serena Gasperini
Francesca Ferro
Giorgia Squeri
Maria Alice Donati
Maria Ester Bernardo
Daniela Tomasoni
Alessandro Aiuti
Laura Passerini
Squeri, G.
Passerini, L.
Ferro, F.
Laudisa, C.
Tomasoni, D.
Deodato, F.
Donati, M. A.
Gasperini, S.
Aiuti, A.
Bernardo, M. E.
Gentner, B.
Naldini, L.
Annoni, A.
Biffi, A.
Gregori, S.
Source :
Molecular Therapy
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2019.

Abstract

Mucopolysaccharidosis type I (MPS-I) is a severe genetic disease caused by a deficiency of the alpha-L-iduronidase (IDUA) enzyme. Ex vivo hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) gene therapy is a promising therapeutic approach for MPS-I, as demonstrated by preclinical studies performed in naive MPS-I mice. However, after enzyme replacement therapy (ERT), several MPS-I patients develop anti-IDUA immunity that may jeopardize ex vivo gene therapy efficacy. Here we treat MPS-I mice with an artificial immunization protocol to mimic the ERT effect in patients, and we demonstrate that IDUA-corrected HSC engraftment is impaired in pre-immunized animals by IDUA-specific CD8+ T cells spared by pre-transplant irradiation. Conversely, humoral anti-IDUA immunity does not impact on IDUA-corrected HSC engraftment. The inclusion of lympho-depleting agents in pre-transplant conditioning of pre-immunized hosts allowes rescue of IDUA-corrected HSC engraftment, which is proportional to CD8+ T cell eradication. Overall, these data demonstrate the relevance of pre-existing anti-transgene T cell immunity on ex vivo HSC gene therapy, and they suggest the application of tailored immune-depleting treatments, as well as a deeper immunological characterization of patients, to safeguard the therapeutic effects of ex vivo HSC gene therapy in immunocompetent hosts.<br />MPS-I patients receiving enzyme replacement therapy develop an anti-IDUA immune response that may affect ex vivo gene therapy. Squeri et al. show, in the MPS-I murine model, that pre-existing IDUA-specific CD8+ T cell response impairs LV-transduced HSC engraftment and that the efficacy of ex vivo gene therapy is rescued by lympho-depleting drugs.

Details

ISSN :
15250016
Volume :
27
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Therapy
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....492f048e0c7211c2addd316741f900de