Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development (Jan 2016)

Preclinical validation: LV/IL-12 transduction of patient leukemia cells for immunotherapy of AML

  • Ju Huang,
  • Yuanfeng Liu,
  • Bryan C Au,
  • Dwayne L Barber,
  • Andrea Arruda,
  • Axel Schambach,
  • Michael Rothe,
  • Mark D Minden,
  • Christopher J Paige,
  • Jeffrey A Medin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/mtm.2016.74
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. C

Abstract

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Interleukin-12 (IL-12) is a potent cytokine that may be harnessed to treat cancer. To date, nearly 100 IL-12-based clinical trials have been initiated worldwide. Yet systemic administration of IL-12 is toxic. Different strategies are being developed to reduce such toxicities by restricting IL-12 distribution. Our previous studies employed lentivector-mediated expression of murine IL-12 in tumor cells and demonstrated effective protection in both mouse leukemia and solid tumor challenge models. In this study, we carried out preclinical validation studies using a novel lentivector to engineer expression of human IL-12 in acute myeloid leukemia blast cells isolated from 21 patients. Acute myeloid leukemia cells were transduced with a bicistronic lentivector that encodes the human IL-12 cDNA as a fusion, as well as a LNGFR (ΔLNGFR)/mutant thymidylate kinase cassette as a marking and cell-fate control element. A range of 20–70% functional transduction efficiencies was achieved. Transduced acute myeloid leukemia cells produced bioactive IL-12 protein and displayed dose-dependent sensitivity to the prodrug 3′-azido-3′-deoxythymidine. In vitro immortalization assays using transduced mouse hematopoietic stem cells demonstrated minimal genotoxic risk from our IL-12 vector. Scale-up transduction and cell processing was subsequently validated in a GMP facility to support our (now approved) Clinical Trial Application (CTA).