Lentivector cryptic splicing mediates increase in CD34+ clones expressing truncated HMGA2 in human X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency

Suk See De Ravin(National Institutes of Health), Siyuan Liu(Leidos (United States)), Colin L. Sweeney(National Institutes of Health), Julie Brault(National Institutes of Health), Narda Whiting‐Theobald(National Institutes of Health), Michelle Ma(National Institutes of Health), Taylor Liu(National Institutes of Health), Uimook Choi(National Institutes of Health), Janet Lee(National Institutes of Health), Sandra Anaya O’Brien(National Institutes of Health), Priscilla Quackenbush(National Institutes of Health), Tyra Estwick(National Institutes of Health), Anita Karra(National Institutes of Health), Ethan Docking(National Institutes of Health), Nana Kwatemaa(National Institutes of Health), Shuang Guo(Leidos (United States)), Ling Su(Leidos (United States)), Zhonghe Sun(Leidos (United States)), Sheng Zhou(St. Jude Children's Research Hospital), Jennifer M. Puck(University of California, San Francisco), Morton J. Cowan(University of California, San Francisco), Luigi D. Notarangelo(National Institutes of Health), Elizabeth M. Kang(National Institutes of Health), Harry L. Malech(National Institutes of Health), Xiaolin Wu(National Institutes of Health)
Nature Communications
June 28, 2022
Cited by 48Open Access
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Abstract

X-linked Severe Combined Immunodeficiency (SCID-X1) due to IL2RG mutations is potentially fatal in infancy where 'emergency' life-saving stem cell transplant may only achieve incomplete immune reconstitution following transplant. Salvage therapy SCID-X1 patients over 2 years old (NCT01306019) is a non-randomized, open-label, phase I/II clinical trial for administration of lentiviral-transduced autologous hematopoietic stem cells following busulfan (6 mg/kg total) conditioning. The primary and secondary objectives assess efficacy in restoring immunity and safety by vector insertion site analysis (VISA). In this ongoing study (19 patients treated), we report VISA in blood lineages from first eight treated patients with longer follow up found a > 60-fold increase in frequency of forward-orientated VIS within intron 3 of the High Mobility Group AT-hook 2 gene. All eight patients demonstrated emergence of dominant HMGA2 VIS clones in progenitor and myeloid lineages, but without disturbance of hematopoiesis. Our molecular analysis demonstrated a cryptic splice site within the chicken β-globin hypersensitivity 4 insulator element in the vector generating truncated mRNA transcripts from many transcriptionally active gene containing forward-oriented intronic vector insert. A two base-pair change at the splice site within the lentiviral vector eliminated splicing activity while retaining vector functional capability. This highlights the importance of functional analysis of lentivectors for cryptic splicing for preclinical safety assessment and a redesign of clinical vectors to improve safety.


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