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In vivo haemopoietic stem cell gene therapy enabled by postnatal trafficking

Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2025
Citazione:
In vivo haemopoietic stem cell gene therapy enabled by postnatal trafficking / Milani, Michela; Fabiano, Anna; Perez-Rodriguez, Marta; Hernandez, Raisa Jofra; Zecchillo, Alessandra; Zonari, Erika; Ottonello, Sofia; Basso-Ricci, Luca; Canepari, Cesare; Volpin, Monica; Iannello, Valeria; Capo, Valentina; Quaranta, Pamela; Seffin, Luca; Russo, Fabio; Biffi, Mauro; Ormoli, Leonardo; Brombin, Chiara; Carlucci, Filippo; Forlino, Antonella; Filibian, Marta; Montini, Eugenio; Scala, Serena; Villa, Anna; Bueren, Juan Antonio; Rio, Paula; Aiuti, Alessandro; Cantore, Alessio; Naldini, Luigi. - In: NATURE. - ISSN 0028-0836. - 643:8073(2025), pp. 1097-1106. [10.1038/s41586-025-09070-3]
Abstract:
: Lentiviral vector (LV)-mediated ex vivo gene therapy for haematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) has delivered on the promise of a 'one-and-done' treatment for several genetic diseases1. However, ex vivo manipulation and patient conditioning before transplantation are major hurdles that could be overcome by an in vivo approach. Here we demonstrate that in vivo gene delivery to HSPCs after systemic LV administration is enabled by the substantial trafficking of these cells from the liver to the bone marrow in newborn mice. We improved gene-transfer efficiency using a phagocytosis-shielded LV, successfully reaching bona fide HSPCs capable of long-term multilineage output and engraftment after serial transplantation, as confirmed by clonal tracking. HSPC mobilization further increased gene transfer, extending the window of intervention, although permissiveness to LV transduction declined with age. We successfully tested this in vivo strategy in mouse models of adenosine deaminase deficiency, autosomal recessive osteopetrosis and Fanconi anaemia. Interestingly, in vivo gene transfer provided a selective advantage to corrected HSPCs in Fanconi anaemia, leading to near-complete haematopoietic reconstitution and prevention of bone marrow failure. Given that circulating HSPCs in humans are also most abundant shortly after birth, in vivo HSPC gene transfer holds strong translational potential across multiple diseases.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Milani, Michela; Fabiano, Anna; Perez-Rodriguez, Marta; Hernandez, Raisa Jofra; Zecchillo, Alessandra; Zonari, Erika; Ottonello, Sofia; Basso-Ricci, Luca; Canepari, Cesare; Volpin, Monica; Iannello, Valeria; Capo, Valentina; Quaranta, Pamela; Seffin, Luca; Russo, Fabio; Biffi, Mauro; Ormoli, Leonardo; Brombin, Chiara; Carlucci, Filippo; Forlino, Antonella; Filibian, Marta; Montini, Eugenio; Scala, Serena; Villa, Anna; Bueren, Juan Antonio; Rio, Paula; Aiuti, Alessandro; Cantore, Alessio; Naldini, Luigi
Autori di Ateneo:
AIUTI ALESSANDRO
BROMBIN CHIARA
CANTORE ALESSIO
NALDINI LUIGI
Link alla scheda completa:
https://iris.unisr.it/handle/20.500.11768/183236
Link al Full Text:
https://iris.unisr.it//retrieve/handle/20.500.11768/183236/330031/unpaywall-bitstream--1078273547.pdf
Pubblicato in:
NATURE
Journal
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URL

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09070-3
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