Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development (Mar 2024)

Gene editing-based targeted integration for correction of Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome

  • Melissa Pille,
  • John M. Avila,
  • So Hyun Park,
  • Cuong Q. Le,
  • Haipeng Xue,
  • Filomeen Haerynck,
  • Lavanya Saxena,
  • Ciaran Lee,
  • Elizabeth J. Shpall,
  • Gang Bao,
  • Bart Vandekerckhove,
  • Brian R. Davis

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 32, no. 1
p. 101208

Abstract

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Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) is a severe X-linked primary immunodeficiency resulting from a diversity of mutations distributed across all 12 exons of the WAS gene. WAS encodes a hematopoietic-specific and developmentally regulated cytoplasmic protein (WASp). The objective of this study was to develop a gene correction strategy potentially applicable to most WAS patients by employing nuclease-mediated, site-specific integration of a corrective WAS gene sequence into the endogenous WAS chromosomal locus. In this study, we demonstrate the ability to target the integration of WAS2-12-containing constructs into intron 1 of the endogenous WAS gene of primary CD34+ hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs), as well as WASp-deficient B cell lines and WASp-deficient primary T cells. This intron 1 targeted integration (TI) approach proved to be quite efficient and restored WASp expression in treated cells. Furthermore, TI restored WASp-dependent function to WAS patient T cells. Edited CD34+ HSPCs exhibited the capacity for multipotent differentiation to various hematopoietic lineages in vitro and in transplanted immunodeficient mice. This methodology offers a potential editing approach for treatment of WAS using patient’s CD34+ cells.

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