Reconstitution of the Ataxia-Telangiectasia Cellular Phenotype With Lentiviral Vectors
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Carranza, Diana; Torres Rusillo, Sara; Ceballos Pérez, Gloria; Blanco Jiménez, Eva; Muñoz López, Martin; García-Pérez, José L.; Molina Pineda Infantas, Ignacio JesúsEditorial
Frontiers Media
Materia
Ataxia-Telangiectasia gene therapy lentiviral vectors
Date
2018-11-20Referencia bibliográfica
Carranza, D. et. al. Front. Immunol. 9:2703. [https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2018.02703]
Sponsorship
12UDG01-ATF from Sparks, The Children’s Medical Charity, London, U.K., in coordination with Action for A-T and the Ataxia-Telangiectasia Society, U.K; Fellowship from the Department of Science and Innovation, Regional Government of Andalucía, Spain; Research contract funded by the Sparks grant, U.K; CICE-FEDERP12- CTS-2256, Plan Nacional de I+D+I 2013-2016 (FISFEDER- PI14/02152), PCIN-2014-115-ERA-NET NEURON II, the European Research Council (ERC-Consolidator ERCSTG- 2012-233764), by an International Early Career Scientist grant from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (IECS- 55007420) and by The Wellcome Trust-University of Edinburgh Institutional Strategic Support Fund (ISFF2); Consejería de Salud de la Junta de Andalucía (PeS- PI-0224-2011)Abstract
Ataxia-telangiectasia (A-T) is a complex disease arising from mutations in the ATM
gene (Ataxia-Telangiectasia Mutated), which plays crucial roles in repairing double-strand
DNA breaks (DSBs). Heterogeneous immunodeficiency, extreme radiosensitivity, frequent
appearance of tumors and neurological degeneration are hallmarks of the disease, which
carries high morbidity and mortality because only palliative treatments are currently
available. Gene therapy was effective in animal models of the disease, but the large
size of the ATM cDNA required the use of HSV-1 or HSV/AAV hybrid amplicon vectors,
whose characteristics make them unlikely tools for treating A-T patients. Due to recent
advances in vector packaging, production and biosafety, we developed a lentiviral vector
containing the ATM cDNA and tested whether or not it could rescue cellular defects
of A-T human mutant fibroblasts. Although the cargo capacity of lentiviral vectors is an
inherent limitation in their use, and despite the large size of the transgene, we successfully
transduced around 20% of ATM-mutant cells. ATM expression and phosphorylation
assays indicated that the neoprotein was functional in transduced cells, further reinforced
by their restored capacity to phosphorylate direct ATM substrates such as p53 and their
capability to repair radiation-induced DSBs. In addition, transduced cells also restored
cellular radiosensitivity and cell cycle abnormalities. Our results demonstrate that lentiviral
vectors can be used to rescue the intrinsic cellular defects of ATM-mutant cells, which
represent, in spite of their limitations, a proof-of-concept for A-T gene therapy.