Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development (Jun 2019)

High-Efficiency Lentiviral Transduction of Human CD34+ Cells in High-Density Culture with Poloxamer and Prostaglandin E2

  • Naoya Uchida,
  • Tina Nassehi,
  • Claire M. Drysdale,
  • Jackson Gamer,
  • Morgan Yapundich,
  • Selami Demirci,
  • Juan J. Haro-Mora,
  • Alexis Leonard,
  • Matthew M. Hsieh,
  • John F. Tisdale

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13
pp. 187 – 196

Abstract

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Hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) gene therapy is curative for various hereditary diseases; however, high-efficiency transduction in HSCs remains crucial to improve the prospects for hemoglobinopathies. We previously optimized lentiviral transduction in human CD34+ cells with serum-free medium containing minimal cytokines, allowing efficient transduction (∼50%) and robust xenograft engraftment. In this study, we further improved lentiviral transduction in human CD34+ cells. High-density culture conditions (4e6/mL) resulted in ∼5-fold more efficient transduction in CD34+ cells (p < 0.01) compared with standard cell density (1e5/mL). After co-culturing vector-exposed CD34+ cells with non-transduced CD34+ cells, high-density culture conditions enhanced lentiviral gene marking in the non-transduced population (p < 0.01) compared with low-density conditions, suggesting that increasing cell-to-cell contact allows more efficient transduction. Two adjuvants, poloxamer 407 (100 μg/mL) and prostaglandin E2 (10 μM), were added to high-density CD34+ cells, resulting in ∼4-fold more efficient transduction (p < 0.01) without significant toxicity compared with no adjuvant control. In summary, we developed a highly efficient lentiviral transduction method in high-density CD34+ cell culture with poloxamer 407 and prostaglandin E2, allowing overall ∼10-fold improvement in transduction efficiency and consistently achieving more than 90% transduction and an average vector copy number of ∼10. Our optimized transduction method should improve gene therapy approaches using lentiviral vectors targeting HSCs. Keywords: lentiviral vector, hematopoietic stem cells, transduction efficiency