Ex vivo long-term expansion of human hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells as a tool for modeling vector integration sites and clonality

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Abstract

Background : Gene therapy (GT) using retroviral vectors (RVs) is efficacious in treating monogenic diseases. However, there is an inherent risk for severe adverse effects due to insertional mutagenesis. Preclinical safety assessment and patient monitoring are inevitable in GT. To assess the genotoxic risk of novel RV vectors, mainly murine hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HPSCs) are routinely used, because human HSPCs cannot be immortalized in vitro using mutagenic vectors. In this study, we aim to identify early signs of clonal outgrowth by performing integration site analyses (ISA). Methods : The small molecules A 83-01, p omalidomide, and U M171 (APU) were used for the ex vivo expansion, lentiviral transduction, and long-term cultivation of umbilical cord blood-derived HSPCs. We determined the influence of APU on the stemness of HSPCs and their differentiation capacity via single-cell RNA sequencing (scRNA seq) and in xenotransplantation studies. To model vector insertion site dynamics, we transduced 7-day expanded HSPCs with a mutagenic or a safer RV. ISA was conducted in human HSPCs over a 5-week cultivation in vitro and compared to the bone marrow of xenotransplanted mice to assess clonal skewings. Results : APU supported the expansion of CD34 + CD38 - CD45RA - CD90 + EPCR + HSPCs. scRNA seq confirmed the enrichment of HSC signature genes in APU-expanded HSPCs compared to the clinically used medium SFT3 (SCF, FLT3-L, TPO, IL-3). After RV transduction, APU still maintained around 30% of CD34 + cells for 5 more weeks. Without the compounds, already 2 weeks post-transduction, less than 10% of cells were CD34 + . The long-term culture allowed the detection of high-risk integrations of the mutagenic SIN-LV.SF in MEIS1 or SUSD6 due to their increasing abundance over time . Bone marrow of xenotransplanted mice was less clonal but did not support the outgrowth of insertional mutants. Overall, APU increased clonal diversity. Conclusions : Our findings propose that long-term cultivation of transduced HSPC in APU allows for outgrowth of clonal integration sites, which are representative of dynamics seen during monitoring of gene therapy patients. Therefore, the in vitro model could be used for risk assessment of insertional mutagenesis, in addition to existing preclinical biosafety assays.

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