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Transfusion independence
and HMGA2 activation after gene therapy of human β-thalassaemia
Cavazzana-Calvo M, Payen E, Negre O, Wang G, Hehir K, Fusil
F, Down J, Denaro M, Brady T, Westerman K, Cavallesco R,
Gillet-Legrand B, Caccavelli L, Sgarra R, Maouche-Chrétien
L, Bernaudin F, Girot R, Dorazio R, Mulder GJ, Polack A,
Bank A, Soulier J, Larghero J, Kabbara N, Dalle B, Gourmel
B, Socie G, Chrétien S, Cartier N, Aubourg P, Fischer
A, Cornetta K, Galacteros F, Beuzard Y, Gluckman E, Bushman
F, Hacein-Bey-Abina S, Leboulch P.
Nature, 467:318-322, 2010
The β-haemoglobinopathies are the most prevalent inherited
disorders worldwide. Gene therapy of β-thalassaemia
is particularly challenging given the requirement for massive
haemoglobin production in a lineage-specific manner and the
lack of selective advantage for corrected haematopoietic
stem cells. Compound β(E)/β(0)-thalassaemia is
the most common form of severe thalassaemia in southeast
Asian countries and their diasporas. The β(E)-globin
allele bears a point mutation that causes alternative splicing.
The abnormally spliced form is non-coding, whereas the correctly
spliced messenger RNA expresses a mutated β(E)-globin
with partial instability. When this is compounded with a
non-functional β(0) allele, a profound decrease in β-globin
synthesis results, and approximately half of β(E)/β(0)-thalassaemia
patients are transfusion-dependent. The only available curative
therapy is allogeneic haematopoietic stem cell transplantation,
although most patients do not have a human-leukocyte-antigen-matched,
geno-identical donor, and those who do still risk rejection
or graft-versus-host disease. Here we show that, 33 months
after lentiviral β-globin gene transfer, an adult patient
with severe β(E)/β(0)-thalassaemia dependent on
monthly transfusions since early childhood has become transfusion
independent for the past 21 months. Blood haemoglobin
is maintained between 9 and 10 g dl(-1), of
which one-third contains vector-encoded β-globin. Most
of the therapeutic benefit results from a dominant, myeloid-biased
cell clone, in which the integrated vector causes transcriptional
activation of HMGA2 in erythroid cells with further increased
expression of a truncated HMGA2 mRNA insensitive to degradation
by let-7 microRNAs. The clonal dominance that accompanies
therapeutic efficacy may be coincidental and stochastic or
result from a hitherto benign cell expansion caused by dysregulation
of the HMGA2 gene in stem/progenitor cells.
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