Article
Author: Buquicchio, Frank ; Schiroli, Giulia ; Scanziani, Eugenio ; Naldini, Luigi ; Castiello, Maria C ; Ferrua, Francesca ; Marcovecchio, Genni E ; Villa, Anna ; Margulies, Carrie ; Lougaris, Vassilios ; Rancoita, Paola Mv ; Albano, Luisa ; Genovese, Pietro ; Kanariou, Maria ; Cotta-Ramusino, Cecilia ; Fontana, Elena ; Lankester, Arjan ; Vavassori, Valentina ; Beretta, Stefano ; Cappelleri, Andrea ; Mercuri, Elisabetta ; Merelli, Ivan ; Plebani, Alessandro
Abstract:
Precise correction of the
CD40LG
gene in T cells and hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPC) holds promise for treating X‐linked hyper‐IgM Syndrome (HIGM1), but its actual therapeutic potential remains elusive. Here, we developed a one‐size‐fits‐all editing strategy for effective T‐cell correction, selection, and depletion and investigated the therapeutic potential of T‐cell and HSPC therapies in the HIGM1 mouse model. Edited patients’ derived CD4 T cells restored physiologically regulated CD40L expression and contact‐dependent B‐cell helper function. Adoptive transfer of wild‐type T cells into conditioned HIGM1 mice rescued antigen‐specific IgG responses and protected mice from a disease‐relevant pathogen. We then obtained ~ 25%
CD40LG
editing in long‐term repopulating human HSPC. Transplanting such proportion of wild‐type HSPC in HIGM1 mice rescued immune functions similarly to T‐cell therapy. Overall, our findings suggest that autologous edited T cells can provide immediate and substantial benefits to HIGM1 patients and position T‐cell ahead of HSPC gene therapy because of easier translation, lower safety concerns and potentially comparable clinical benefits.