REVIEW Gene Therapy

REVIEW Gene Therapy

Leukemia (2001) 15, 523–544 2001 Nature Publishing Group All rights reserved 0887-6924/01 $15.00 www.nature.com/leu REVIEW Gene therapy: principles and applications to hematopoietic cells VFI Van Tendeloo1,2, C Van Broeckhoven2 and ZN Berneman1 1Laboratory of Experimental Hematology, University of Antwerp (UIA), Antwerp University Hospital (UZA), Antwerp; and 2Laboratory of Molecular Genetics, University of Antwerp (UIA), Department of Molecular Genetics, Flanders Interuniversity Institute for Biotechnology (VIB), Antwerp, Belgium Ever since the development of technology allowing the transfer Recombinant viral vectors of new genes into eukaryotic cells, the hematopoietic system has been an obvious and desirable target for gene therapy. The last 10 years have witnessed an explosion of interest in this Biological gene transfer methods make use of modified DNA approach to treat human disease, both inherited and acquired, or RNA viruses to infect the cell, thereby introducing and with the initiation of multiple clinical protocols. All gene ther- expressing its genome which contains the gene of interest (= apy strategies have two essential technical requirements. ‘transduction’).1 The most commonly used viral vectors are These are: (1) the efficient introduction of the relevant genetic discussed below. In each case, recombinant viruses have had material into the target cell and (2) the expression of the trans- gene at therapeutic levels. Conceptual and technical hurdles the genes encoding essential replicative and/or packaging pro- involved with these requirements are still the objects of active teins replaced by the gene of interest. Advantages and disad- research. To date, the most widely used and best understood vantages of each recombinant viral vector are summarized in vectors for gene transfer in hematopoietic cells are derived Table 1. from retroviruses, although they suffer from several limitations. However, as gene transfer mechanisms become more efficient and long-term gene expression is enhanced, the variety of dis- eases that can be tackled by gene therapy will continue to Retroviral vectors expand. However, until the problem of delivery and subsequent expression is adequately resolved, gene therapy will not realize its full potential. The first part of this review gives an overview After seminal work of the group of Rosenberg demonstrating of the gene delivery technology available at present to transfer the feasibility and safety of using retroviral gene transduction genetic sequences in human somatic cells. The relevance of for human gene marking studies,2 recombinant retroviruses the hematopoietic system to the development of gene therapy have become widely used and well characterized vectors for strategies as well as hematopoietic cell-based gene therapy is 3,4 discussed in the second part. Leukemia (2001) 15, 523–544. preclinical and clinical gene therapy trials. It is the unique Keywords: gene therapy; hematopoietic cells; hematopoietic stem life cycle of the retrovirus that has made it an attractive vector cells; T lymphocytes; viral gene transfer; recombinant viral vectors; for gene transfer.5 Retroviral transduction is usually performed retrovirus; adenovirus; adeno-associated virus (AAV); lentivirus; her- in the presence of a poly-cation (eg polybrene or protamine pes simplex virus; nonviral gene transfer; lipofection; receptor- sulphate) to reduce electro-static interference between the mediated gene transfer; particle-mediated gene transfer; DNA injec- virus and its target cell. Retroviral vectors are packaged into tion; electroporation; extrachromosomal replicating vectors infectious particles after introduction into a retroviral packag- ing cell line containing the necessary structural genes (gag, pol and env, coding respectively for structural proteins, reverse Gene delivery technology transcriptase/integrase and envelope protein) but lacking the packaging signal (Χ, psi) required for encapsidation of vector Importantly, there is no such thing as an ‘ideal’ vehicle system RNA into virions (Figure 1). The recombinant vector contain- for all gene therapy applications. In each gene therapy setting, ing the gene of interest is devoid of structural genes but has the optimal vector system is determined by the nature of the retained the long terminal repeats (LTR) required for viral inte- disorder (inherited or acquired), the type of gene delivery (in gration and transcription and the packaging signal. This comp- vivo or ex vivo), the duration of transgene expression (long- lementary process ensures that the producer cell line effec- term or short-term) and the target cell type. A variety of chemi- tively generates replication-incompetent retroviral vectors that cal, physical and biological gene transfer methods have been are capable of only one round of transduction (Figure 1).3 developed in order to deal with the ‘delivery problem’. These Advantages of retroviral gene transfer are high transfer techniques range from relatively simple forms of transfection efficiency and stable chromosomal integration. Disadvantages such as electroporation, lipofection and gene gun to the include the inability to infect nondividing cells,6 transcrip- exploitation of the natural infectious properties of recombi- tional repression,7,8 and potential insertional mutagenesis.9 nant viral vectors. Furthermore, the size of the gene insert is limited as retro- viruses are only capable of packaging around 10 kb of genetic material.10 Noteworthy, with the latest generation of comp- lementing packaging cell lines, the risk of producing repli- cation-competent retroviruses (RCR) has practically been eliminated. By placing the gag–pol and env genes on to separ- ate plasmids that could be introduced separately into the Correspondence: ZN Berneman, Department of Hematology, Antwerp University Hospital (UIA/UZA), Wilrijkstraat 10, B-2650 Edegem, packaging cell line, the risk of RCR production has been vir- 11 Belgium; Fax: +32-3-825 1148 tually eliminated (Figure 1). The problem of the LTR overlap Received 4 May 2000; accepted 2 January 2001 that exists between the vector components has been solved Hematopoietic cell-based gene therapy VFI Van Tendeloo et al 524 Table 1 Summary of viral gene transfer techniques Viral vector type Advantages Disadvantages Adenoviral vectors Broad host range Possible (hepato)toxicity Transduce nondividing cells Transient expression High titer Lack of tissue specificity No possibility of insertional mutagenesis Vector immunogenicity (1 fatal reaction High transduction efficiency described) Adeno-associated viral vectors Broad host range ,5 kb DNA insert Transduce nondividing cells Recombinant vectors lose specific integration Chromosomal integration Difficulty to purify vector (helper AdV Stable expression contamination) Wild-type integrates at specific site Low titer Possible insertional mutagenesis Herpes simplex viral vectors Neurotropic Lytic replication No possibility of insertional mutagenesis Transient expression Transduce nondividing cells Low titer Accept large DNA inserts (|15 kb) Retroviral vectors Chromosomal integration Possible insertional mutagenesis Can be tissue-specific Transduces dividing cells only Stable expression Silencing of LTR promoter Not immunogenic Lentiviral vectors Transduce nondividing cells Possible insertional mutagenesis Tissue-specific Ethical considerations Stable expression High titer (1010 p.f.u./ml) Figure 1 Retroviral gene transfer. A eukaryotic expression plasmid lacking the essential genes for replication (gag, pol and env) but containing a packaging signal χ is transfected into a complementing cell line. This cell line is stably transfected with the complementary retroviral genes, thereby providing the structural proteins and reverse transcriptase in trans, but lacking the packaging signal χ required for encapsidation of vector RNA into virions. This complementary system results in the packaging of replication-incompetent recombinant retroviruses. Retroviral vectors transduce target cells by interaction with specific receptors present on the cell surface. After entering the cell, the viral RNA is reverse transcribed, and the proviral DNA randomly integrates into the target cell genome, where the transgene is stably expressed. Leukemia Hematopoietic cell-based gene therapy VFI Van Tendeloo et al 525 through the use of heterologous promoters and polyadenyl- functional T lymphocytes. Patients did not receive additional ation signals in the retroviral helper constructs (Figure 1).12 therapies, are off-therapy and doing well. Although further fol- The majority of retroviral vectors currently being used are low-up is needed to assess long-term effects of gene transfer, derived from Moloney murine leukemia virus (MoMuLV). this trial represents a major milestone in the field of gene MoMuLV-based vectors bind to a target cell through an inter- therapy for a monogenetic disease.29 action with a receptor specific for the env protein encoded by the complementing cell line, which primarily determines the host range of the retroviral particle.13 For the ecotropic envel- Adenoviral vectors ope protein, which allows transduction of murine cells, the receptor is a cationic amino acid transporter.14 In order to In the fast growing area of vector systems, one of the most either expand or limit the viral host range, it is possible to advanced vectors is the replication-deficient recombinant incorporate a heterologous viral envelope protein in the vec- adenovirus (AdV). Although its natural tropism

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