Transferring large or multiple genes into primary human stem/progenitor cells is challenged by restrictions in vector capacity, and this hurdle limits the success of gene therapy. A paradigm is Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), an incurable disorder caused by mutations in the largest human gene: dystrophin. The combination of large-capacity vectors, such as human artificial chromosomes (HACs), with stem/progenitor cells may overcome this limitation. We previously reported amelioration of the dystrophic phenotype in mice transplanted with murine muscle progenitors containing a HAC with the entire dystrophin locus (DYS-HAC). However, translation of this strategy to human muscle progenitors requires extension of their proliferative potential to withstand clonal cell expansion after HAC transfer. Here, we show that reversible cell immortalisation mediated by lentivirally delivered excisable hTERT and Bmi1 transgenes extended cell proliferation, enabling transfer of a novel DYS-HAC into DMD satellite cell-derived myoblasts and perivascular cell-derived mesoangioblasts. Genetically corrected cells maintained a stable karyotype, did not undergo tumorigenic transformation and retained their migration ability. Cells remained myogenic in vitro (spontaneously or upon MyoD induction) and engrafted murine skeletal muscle upon transplantation. Finally, we combined the aforementioned functions into a next-generation HAC capable of delivering reversible immortalisation, complete genetic correction, additional dystrophin expression, inducible differentiation and controllable cell death. This work establishes a novel platform for complex gene transfer into clinically relevant human muscle progenitors for DMD gene therapy.

Reversible immortalisation enables genetic correction of human muscle progenitors and engineering of next-generation human artificial chromosomes for Duchenne muscular dystrophy / S. Benedetti, N. Uno, H. Hoshiya, M. Ragazzi, G. Ferrari, Y. Kazuki, L.A. Moyle, R. Tonlorenzi, A. Lombardo, S. Chaouch, V. Mouly, M. Moore, L. Popplewell, K. Kazuki, M. Katoh, L. Naldini, G. Dickson, G. Messina, M. Oshimura, G. Cossu, F.S. Tedesco. - In: EMBO MOLECULAR MEDICINE. - ISSN 1757-4676. - 10:2(2018 Feb), pp. 254-275. [10.15252/emmm.201607284]

Reversible immortalisation enables genetic correction of human muscle progenitors and engineering of next-generation human artificial chromosomes for Duchenne muscular dystrophy

G. Messina;G. Cossu;
2018

Abstract

Transferring large or multiple genes into primary human stem/progenitor cells is challenged by restrictions in vector capacity, and this hurdle limits the success of gene therapy. A paradigm is Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), an incurable disorder caused by mutations in the largest human gene: dystrophin. The combination of large-capacity vectors, such as human artificial chromosomes (HACs), with stem/progenitor cells may overcome this limitation. We previously reported amelioration of the dystrophic phenotype in mice transplanted with murine muscle progenitors containing a HAC with the entire dystrophin locus (DYS-HAC). However, translation of this strategy to human muscle progenitors requires extension of their proliferative potential to withstand clonal cell expansion after HAC transfer. Here, we show that reversible cell immortalisation mediated by lentivirally delivered excisable hTERT and Bmi1 transgenes extended cell proliferation, enabling transfer of a novel DYS-HAC into DMD satellite cell-derived myoblasts and perivascular cell-derived mesoangioblasts. Genetically corrected cells maintained a stable karyotype, did not undergo tumorigenic transformation and retained their migration ability. Cells remained myogenic in vitro (spontaneously or upon MyoD induction) and engrafted murine skeletal muscle upon transplantation. Finally, we combined the aforementioned functions into a next-generation HAC capable of delivering reversible immortalisation, complete genetic correction, additional dystrophin expression, inducible differentiation and controllable cell death. This work establishes a novel platform for complex gene transfer into clinically relevant human muscle progenitors for DMD gene therapy.
English
DMD; gene therapy; human artificial chromosomes; human muscle stem/progenitor cells; immortalisation; molecular medicine
Settore BIO/17 - Istologia
Articolo
Esperti anonimi
Pubblicazione scientifica
feb-2018
dic-2017
Wiley Blackwell Publishing
10
2
254
275
22
Pubblicato
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
scopus
crossref
pubmed
Aderisco
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Reversible immortalisation enables genetic correction of human muscle progenitors and engineering of next-generation human artificial chromosomes for Duchenne muscular dystrophy / S. Benedetti, N. Uno, H. Hoshiya, M. Ragazzi, G. Ferrari, Y. Kazuki, L.A. Moyle, R. Tonlorenzi, A. Lombardo, S. Chaouch, V. Mouly, M. Moore, L. Popplewell, K. Kazuki, M. Katoh, L. Naldini, G. Dickson, G. Messina, M. Oshimura, G. Cossu, F.S. Tedesco. - In: EMBO MOLECULAR MEDICINE. - ISSN 1757-4676. - 10:2(2018 Feb), pp. 254-275. [10.15252/emmm.201607284]
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Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
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S. Benedetti, N. Uno, H. Hoshiya, M. Ragazzi, G. Ferrari, Y. Kazuki, L.A. Moyle, R. Tonlorenzi, A. Lombardo, S. Chaouch, V. Mouly, M. Moore, L. Popplewell, K. Kazuki, M. Katoh, L. Naldini, G. Dickson, G. Messina, M. Oshimura, G. Cossu, F.S. Tedesco
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/549894
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