[HTML][HTML] Busulfan combined with immunosuppression allows efficient engraftment of gene-modified cells in a rhesus macaque model

N Uchida, T Nassehi, CM Drysdale, J Gamer… - Molecular Therapy, 2019 - cell.com
N Uchida, T Nassehi, CM Drysdale, J Gamer, M Yapundich, AC Bonifacino, AE Krouse…
Molecular Therapy, 2019cell.com
Busulfan conditioning is utilized for hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) depletion in the context of
HSC gene-therapy conditioning but may result in insufficient immunosuppression. In this
study, we evaluated whether additional immunosuppression is required for efficient
engraftment of gene-modified cells using a rhesus HSC lentiviral gene-therapy model. We
transduced half of rhesus CD34+ cells with an enhanced green fluorescent protein (GFP)-
encoding vector (immunogenic) and the other half with a γ-globin-encoding vector (no …
Busulfan conditioning is utilized for hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) depletion in the context of HSC gene-therapy conditioning but may result in insufficient immunosuppression. In this study, we evaluated whether additional immunosuppression is required for efficient engraftment of gene-modified cells using a rhesus HSC lentiviral gene-therapy model. We transduced half of rhesus CD34+ cells with an enhanced green fluorescent protein (GFP)-encoding vector (immunogenic) and the other half with a γ-globin-encoding vector (no predicted immunogenicity). After autologous transplantation of both transduced cell populations following myeloablative busulfan conditioning (5.5 mg/kg/day for 4 days), we observed immunological rejection of GFP-transduced cells up to 3 months post-transplant and stable engraftment of γ-globin-transduced cells in two animals, demonstrating that ablative busulfan conditioning is sufficient for engraftment of gene-modified cells producing non-immunogenic proteins but insufficient to permit engraftment of immunogenic proteins. We then added immunosuppression with abatacept and sirolimus to busulfan conditioning and observed engraftment of both GFP- and γ-globin-transduced cells in two animals, demonstrating that additional immunosuppression allows for engraftment of gene-modified cells expressing immunogenic proteins. In conclusion, myeloablative busulfan conditioning should permit engraftment of gene-modified cells producing non-immunogenic proteins, while additional immunosuppression is required to prevent immunological rejection of a neoantigen.
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