Preferential Survival of CD4+ T Lymphocytes Engineered with Anti-Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV) Genes in HIV-Infected Individuals

Richard A. Morgan(National Human Genome Research Institute), Robert Walker(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases), Charles S. Carter, Ven Natarajan, Jorge A. Tavel(National Institutes of Health), Chris Bechtel(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases), Betsy Herpin(National Institutes of Health), Linda Muul(National Human Genome Research Institute), Zhili Zheng(National Human Genome Research Institute), Shyla Jagannatha, Bruce A. Bunnell(National Institutes of Health), Vicki Fellowes, Julia A. Metcalf, Randy Stevens, Michael Baseler, Susan F. Leitman, Elizabeth J. Read, R. Michael Blaese(National Human Genome Research Institute), H. Clifford Lane(National Institutes of Health)
Human Gene Therapy
September 1, 2005
Cited by 72

Abstract

The present study examined the safety and relative in vivo survival of genetically engineered CD4+ T lymphocytes in human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected individuals. Ten pairs of identical twins discordant for HIV infection were recruited, with the uninfected twin serving as the lymphocyte donor. Ten subjects were treated with a total of 19 separate infusions of retroviral vector-transduced CD4+ enriched T cells. Control (neo gene) or anti-HIV gene (antisense trans-activation response [TAR] element and/or trans-dominant Rev)-engineered lymphocytes were monitored in peripheral blood for 3 years, using a vector-specific PCR assay. Data from 9 of the 10 patients (15 of the 19 infusions) demonstrated preferential survival of CD4+ lymphocytes containing the anti-HIV gene(s) in the immediate weeks after infusion. In six of six patients studied long term (>100 weeks), only T cells containing the anti-HIV genes were consistently detected. In addition, a marked survival advantage of anti-HIV gene-containing T cells was observed in a patient treated during a period of high viral load. Thus, these data strongly support the hypothesis that anti-HIV genes afford a survival advantage to T cells and potential benefit to HIV-1+ individuals.


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