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Jenni Fleischauer

Medizinische Hochschule Hannover

ORCID: 0009-0000-1850-9006

Publishes on Virus-based gene therapy research, CRISPR and Genetic Engineering, Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation. 23 papers and 140 citations.

23Publications
140Total Citations

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Top publicationsby citations

Meteorin-like promotes heart repair through endothelial KIT receptor tyrosine kinase
Cited by 114Open Access

Effective tissue repair after myocardial infarction entails a vigorous angiogenic response, guided by incompletely defined immune cell–endothelial cell interactions. We identify the monocyte- and macrophage-derived cytokine METRNL (meteorin-like) as a driver of postinfarction angiogenesis and high-affinity ligand for the stem cell factor receptor KIT (KIT receptor tyrosine kinase). METRNL mediated angiogenic effects in cultured human endothelial cells through KIT-dependent signaling pathways. In a mouse model of myocardial infarction, METRNL promoted infarct repair by selectively expanding the KIT-expressing endothelial cell population in the infarct border zone. Metrnl -deficient mice failed to mount this KIT-dependent angiogenic response and developed severe postinfarction heart failure. Our data establish METRNL as a KIT receptor ligand in the context of ischemic tissue repair.

Development of an in vitro genotoxicity assay to detect retroviral vector-induced lymphoid insertional mutants
Antonella Lucía Bastone, Violetta Dziadek, Philipp John-Neek et al.|Molecular Therapy — Methods & Clinical Development|2023
Cited by 9Open Access

, frequently observed in clinical trials with severe adverse events. Lymphoid insertional mutants displayed a unique gene expression signature identified by SAGA. The gene expression-based highly sensitive molecular readout will broaden our understanding of vector-induced oncogenicity and help in pre-clinical prediction of retroviral genotoxicity.

TGFβ Inhibitor A83-01 Enhances Murine HSPC Expansion for Gene Therapy
Cited by 8Open Access

Murine hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) are commonly used as model systems during gene therapeutic retroviral vector development and preclinical biosafety assessment. Here, we developed cell culture conditions to maintain stemness and prevent differentiation during HSPC culture. We used the small compounds A83-01, pomalidomide, and UM171 (APU). Highly purified LSK SLAM cells expanded in medium containing SCF, IL-3, FLT3-L, and IL-11 but rapidly differentiated to myeloid progenitors and mast cells. The supplementation of APU attenuated the differentiation and preserved the stemness of HSPCs. The TGFβ inhibitor A83-01 was identified as the major effector. It significantly inhibited the mast-cell-associated expression of FcεR1α and the transcription of genes regulating the formation of granules and promoted a 3800-fold expansion of LSK cells. As a functional readout, we used expanded HSPCs in state-of-the-art genotoxicity assays. Like fresh cells, APU-expanded HSPCs transduced with a mutagenic retroviral vector developed a myeloid differentiation block with clonal restriction and dysregulated oncogenic transcriptomic signatures due to vector integration near the high-risk locus Mecom. Thus, expanded HSPCs might serve as a novel cell source for retroviral vector testing and genotoxicity studies.

Inflammation-inducible promoters to overexpress immune inhibitory factors by MSCs
Anton Selich, Jenni Fleischauer, Tina Roepke et al.|Stem Cell Research & Therapy|2023
Cited by 6Open Access

BACKGROUND: Mesenchymal stromal cells (MSCs) are excessively investigated in the context of inflammation-driven diseases, but the clinical results are often moderate. MSCs are naturally activated by inflammatory signals, which lead to the secretion of immune inhibitory factors in inflamed tissues. Many work groups try to improve the therapeutic outcome of MSCs by genetic modification and the constitutive overexpression of immune modulatory transgenes. However, the ectopic secretion of immune inhibitory transgenes increases the chances of infections, and constitutive transgene expression is not necessary for chronic diseases undergoing different inflammatory stages. METHODS: We designed and tested inflammation-induced promoters to control transgene expression from integrating lentiviral vectors in human umbilical cord MSCs. Therefore, we investigated different combinations of general transcription factor elements to achieve a minimal promoter with low basal activity. The best candidates were combined with interferon-induced GAS or ISRE DNA motifs. The constructs with the highest transgene expression upon addition of pro-inflammatory cytokines were compared to vectorized promoters from inflammation-induced genes (CD317, CXCL9, CXCL10, CXCL11 and IDO1). Finally, we investigated IL10 as a potential immune inhibitory transgene by transcriptome analyses, ELISA and in an acute lung injury mouse model. RESULTS: The synthetic promoters achieved a high and specific transgene expression upon IFN-γ addition. However, the CXCL11 promoter showed synergistic activity upon IFN-γ, TNF-α and IL1-β treatment and surpassed the transgene expression height of all tested promoters in the study. We observed in transcriptome analyses that IL10 has no effect on MSCs and in ELISA that IL10 is only secreted by our genetically modified and activated CXCL11-IL10-MSCs. Finally, transplanted CXCL11-IL10-MSCs increased CD19+ and CD4+ lymphoid cells, and decreased CD11b+ Ly6g myeloid cells in an ALI mouse model. CONCLUSION: These results provide new insights into MSC inflammatory activation and the subsequent translation into a tool for a tailored expression of transgenes in inflammatory microenvironments. The newly developed promoter elements are potentially interesting for other inflamed tissues, and can be combined with other elements or used in other cell types.

Meta-Analysis and Optimization of the <i>In Vitro</i> Immortalization Assay for Safety Assessment of Retroviral Vectors in Gene Therapy
Cited by 3Open Access

The underlying risk of retroviral vector-induced insertional oncogenesis in gene therapies requires a reliable preclinical safety assessment. Dysregulation of genes neighboring the vector’s integration sites has triggered hematopoietic malignancies in patients treated with different vector genera and designs. With ca. 18 years in practical use, the in vitro immortalization (IVIM) assay can quantify this mutagenic potential and is actively requested by regulatory authorities during preclinical stages. Here, we present a thorough meta-analysis of IVIM data alongside a step-by-step cell culture protocol. On this basis, we propose clonal outgrowth as the single indicator of mutagenicity, simplifying the IVIM assay cost- and time-wise.