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Sickle cell disease corrected in human models using stem cell-based gene therapy
New York | Wednesday, December 28, 2005, 08:00 Hrs  [IST]

Researchers led by a team of scientists at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Centre have devised a novel strategy that uses stem cell-based gene therapy and RNA interference to genetically reverse sickle cell disease (SCD) in human cells. This research is the first to demonstrate a way to genetically correct this debilitating blood disease using RNA interference technology.

To prevent the production of the abnormal haemoglobin that causes sickle cell disease, a viral vector was introduced in cell cultures of patients who have the disease. The vector carried a therapeutic globin gene harbouring an embedded small interfering RNA precursor designed to suppress abnormal haemoglobin formation. Tested in adult stem cells from SCD patients, researchers found that the newly formed red blood cells made normal haemoglobin and suppressed production of the sickle shaped haemoglobin typical of the disease, states the centre release.

"Sickle cell disease can only be cured by transplanting healthy blood-forming stem cells from another individual, but this option is not available to most patients due to the difficulty in finding a compatible donor. By using gene transfer, there is always a donor match because the patient's own stem cells are used to treat the disease," explained Michel Sadelain, Immunology Programme at MSKCC and the study's senior author.

To treat SCD, Sloan-Kettering scientists devised a novel engineering strategy combining RNA interference with globin gene transfer by creating a therapeutic transgene, consisting of the gamma-globin gene and small interfering RNA specific for beta S-globin, the globin mutant chain that causes sickle cell disease.

"An innovative and sophisticated approach was needed to genetically engineer haematopoietic stem cells using a practical and clinically applicable process. The transferred gene must not disrupt the cell's normal functions," explained Isabelle Riviere, co-director of the gene transfer and somatic cell engineering facility and a study co-author.

The new gene had two functions - to produce normal haemoglobin and suppress the generation of sickle shaped haemoglobin S. The therapeutic gene was engineered into a lentiviral vector and introduced into haematopoietic stem cells. After the cells received the treatment, they made normal haemoglobin, added the release.

"This proved our hypothesis that you can simultaneously add one function and delete another in the same cell and obtain synergistic genetic modifications within a single cell. In this case, we used the technique to correct sickle cell disease, but it should be broadly applicable to use therapeutically in stem cells or malignant cells," said Selda Samakoglu, a member of Dr. Sadelain's laboratory and the study's first author.

Sickle cell disease is a genetic condition that causes an abnormal type of haemoglobin to be made in red blood cells. The aggregation of haemoglobin S inside red cells interferes with the body's blood cells' ability to flow through small blood vessels, depriving tissues of adequate oxygen supply. This can cause pain, anaemia, infections, organ damage, and stroke.

Approximately 80,000 people in the United States have this inherited condition, which is primarily found in people of African, Mediterranean, Indian, or Middle Eastern origin. There is no known cure other than stem cell transplantation.

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