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Thymidine kinase suicide gene-mediated ganciclovir ablation of autologous gene-modified rhesus hematopoiesis.


ABSTRACT: Despite the genotoxic complications encountered in clinical gene therapy trials for primary immunodeficiency diseases targeting hematopoietic cells with integrating vectors; this strategy holds promise for the cure of several monogenic blood, metabolic and neurodegenerative diseases. In this study, we asked whether the inclusion of a suicide gene in a standard retrovirus vector would allow elimination of vector-containing stem and progenitor cells and their progeny in vivo following transplantation, using our rhesus macaque transplantation model. Following stable engraftment with autologous CD34(+) cells transduced with a retrovirus vector encoding a highly sensitive modified Herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase SR39, the administration of the antiviral prodrug ganciclovir (GCV) was effective in completely eliminating vector-containing cells in all hematopoietic lineages in vivo. The sustained absence of vector-containing cells over time, without additional GCV administration, suggests that the ablation of TkSR39 GCV-sensitive cells occurred in the most primitive hematopoietic long-term repopulating stem or progenitor cell compartment. These results are a proof-of-concept that the inclusion of a suicide gene in integrating vectors, in addition to a therapeutic gene, can provide a mechanism for later elimination of vector-containing cells, thereby increasing the safety of gene transfer.

SUBMITTER: Barese CN 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3464648 | biostudies-literature | 2012 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Thymidine kinase suicide gene-mediated ganciclovir ablation of autologous gene-modified rhesus hematopoiesis.

Barese Cecilia N CN   Krouse Allen E AE   Metzger Mark E ME   King Connor A CA   Traversari Catia C   Marini Frank C FC   Donahue Robert E RE   Dunbar Cynthia E CE  

Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy 20120821 10


Despite the genotoxic complications encountered in clinical gene therapy trials for primary immunodeficiency diseases targeting hematopoietic cells with integrating vectors; this strategy holds promise for the cure of several monogenic blood, metabolic and neurodegenerative diseases. In this study, we asked whether the inclusion of a suicide gene in a standard retrovirus vector would allow elimination of vector-containing stem and progenitor cells and their progeny in vivo following transplantat  ...[more]

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