Development and IND-enabling studies of a novel Cas9 genome-edited autologous CD34+ cell therapy to induce fetal hemoglobin for sickle cell disease

开发和IND申报研究:一种新型Cas9基因编辑自体CD34+细胞疗法,用于诱导胎儿血红蛋白以治疗镰状细胞病。

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作者:Varun Katta,Kiera O'Keefe,Yichao Li,Thiyagaraj Mayuranathan,Cicera R Lazzarotto,Rachael K Wood,Rachel M Levine,Alicia Powers,Kalin Mayberry,Garret Manquen,Yu Yao,Jingjing Zhang,Yoonjeong Jang,Nikitha Nimmagadda,Erin A Dempsey,GaHyun Lee,Naoya Uchida,Yong Cheng,Frank Fazio,Tim Lockey,Mike Meagher,Akshay Sharma,John F Tisdale,Sheng Zhou,Jonathan S Yen,Mitchell J Weiss,Shengdar Q Tsai

Abstract

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is a common, severe genetic blood disorder. Current pharmacotherapies are partially effective and allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation is associated with immune toxicities. Genome editing of patient hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) to reactivate fetal hemoglobin (HbF) in erythroid progeny offers an alternative potentially curative approach to treat SCD. Although the FDA released guidelines for evaluating genome editing risks, it remains unclear how best to approach pre-clinical assessment of genome-edited cell products. Here, we describe rigorous pre-clinical development of a therapeutic γ-globin gene promoter editing strategy that supported an investigational new drug application cleared by the FDA. We compared γ-globin promoter and BCL11A enhancer targets, identified a potent HbF-inducing lead candidate, and tested our approach in mobilized CD34+ hematopoietic stem progenitor cells (HSPCs) from SCD patients. We observed efficient editing, HbF induction to predicted therapeutic levels, and reduced sickling. With single-cell analyses, we defined the heterogeneity of HbF induction and HBG1/HBG2 transcription. With CHANGE-seq for sensitive and unbiased off-target discovery followed by targeted sequencing, we did not detect off-target activity in edited HSPCs. Our study provides a blueprint for translating new ex vivo HSC genome editing strategies toward clinical trials for treating SCD and other blood disorders.

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