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Lentiviral-Engineered Mesenchymal Stem Cells for Hemophilia B Gene Therapy

<p>Hemophilia B patients may have frequent, spontaneous and life-threatening bleeds that are currently managed by an invasive and expensive treatment. Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are increasingly being applied to clinically therapeutic strategies and lentiviral gene vectors have been shown to be safe and efficient tools for modifying stem cells for long-term expression of high levels of transgenes. In this study, MSCs were engineered with a lentivirus to express sustained and therapeutic levels of human FIX protein <em>in vitro </em>and in mice. The modified MSCs secreted human FIX protein at levels exceeding 4 μg/10<sup>6</sup> MSCs/24 h with high FIX coagulant activity of greater than 2.5 mIU/10<sup>6</sup> MSCs/24 h for 6 week <em>in vitro. </em>Functional FIX transgene was continually expressed by these cells when they were induced to differentiate into adipocyte, osteoblast and chondrocyte lineages <em>in vitro</em>. However, the modified MSCs transplanted via tail vein into NOD-SCID-γ mice expressed low levels of FIX <em>in vivo</em>. The transplantation procedure had an increased risk of death that was more pronounced in mice that received cell doses exceeding 2 million cells. Organ examinations suggested the deaths resulted from entrapment of MSCs in pulmonary capillaries. Modified MSCs encapsulated in alginate-PLL microcapsules and transplanted into the peritoneal cavity of both NOD-SCID-γ and hemophilia B mice at 9 million cells/mouse resulted in therapeutic expression around 100 ng of human FIX/mL of plasma only for a few days <em>in vivo</em> as human FIX expression quickly decreased to basal values by the end of the first week. Cultured <em>ex vivo</em>, human FIX expression by retrieved capsules indicated an innate immune response to the encapsulated cells prevented sustained expression of FIX. These investigations demonstrate that lentivirally modified MSCs have the potential to express therapeutic human FIX for sustained periods <em>in vitro</em>, even after their differentiation. However, they also highlight the challenges to overcome to optimize cell engraftment and survival following transplantation, and to minimize the immune responses associated with the xenogeneic translational<em> </em>models used.</p> / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/13801
Date January 2013
CreatorsDodd, Megan J.
ContributorsHortelano, Gonzalo, Ofosu, Fred, Biomedical Engineering
Source SetsMcMaster University
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis

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