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Journal ArticleDOI

Therapeutic haemoglobin synthesis in β-thalassaemic mice expressing lentivirus-encoded human β-globin

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TLDR
It is shown that the use of recombinant lentiviruses enables efficient transfer and faithful integration of the human β-globin gene together with large segments of its locus control region, which should be of therapeutic benefit in patients with severe defects in haemoglobin production.
Abstract
The stable introduction of a functional beta-globin gene in haematopoietic stem cells could be a powerful approach to treat beta-thalassaemia and sickle-cell disease. Genetic approaches aiming to increase normal beta-globin expression in the progeny of autologous haematopoietic stem cells might circumvent the limitations and risks of allogeneic cell transplants. However, low-level expression, position effects and transcriptional silencing hampered the effectiveness of viral transduction of the human beta-globin gene when it was linked to minimal regulatory sequences. Here we show that the use of recombinant lentiviruses enables efficient transfer and faithful integration of the human beta-globin gene together with large segments of its locus control region. In long-term recipients of unselected transduced bone marrow cells, tetramers of two murine alpha-globin and two human betaA-globin molecules account for up to 13% of total haemoglobin in mature red cells of normal mice. In beta-thalassaemic heterozygous mice higher percentages are obtained (17% to 24%), which are sufficient to ameliorate anaemia and red cell morphology. Such levels should be of therapeutic benefit in patients with severe defects in haemoglobin production.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Viral vectors for gene therapy: the art of turning infectious agents into vehicles of therapeutics

TL;DR: Further vector refinement and/or development is required before gene therapy will become standard care for any individual disorder, and some clinical successes are over the horizon.
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Gene therapy comes of age.

TL;DR: The pioneering work that led the gene therapy field to its current state is reviewed, gene-editing technologies that are expected to play a major role in the field's future are described, and practical challenges in getting these therapies to patients who need them are discussed.
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Gene therapy: trials and tribulations

TL;DR: A key problem in gene therapy is the lack of a vector system that fulfils all the requirements for safety and efficacy, and viral vectors are the most promising vectors at this time.
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Correction of Sickle Cell Disease in Transgenic Mouse Models by Gene Therapy

TL;DR: In two mouse SCD models, Berkeley and SAD, inhibition of red blood cell dehydration and sickling was achieved with correction of hematological parameters, splenomegaly, and prevention of the characteristic urine concentration defect.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Third-Generation Lentivirus Vector with a Conditional Packaging System

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that the requirement for the tat gene can be offset by placing constitutive promoters upstream of the vector transcript, and the improved design presented here should facilitate testing of lentivirus vectors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiply attenuated lentiviral vector achieves efficient gene delivery in vivo.

TL;DR: An HIV vector system in which the virulence genes env, vif, vpr, vpu, and nef have been deleted is described, and this multiply attenuated vector conserved the ability to transduce growth-arrested cells and monocyte-derived macrophages in culture, and could efficiently deliver genes in vivo into adult neurons.
Journal ArticleDOI

Position-independent, high-level expression of the human β-globin gene in transgenic mice

TL;DR: The results indicate that the DNA regions flanking the human beta-globin locus contain dominant regulatory sequences that specify position-independent expression and normally activate the complete human multigene beta- globin loci.
Journal ArticleDOI

The HIV-1 rev trans-activator acts through a structured target sequence to activate nuclear export of unspliced viral mRNA.

TL;DR: These results indicate that the HIV-1 rev gene product induces HIV- 1 structural gene expression by activating the sequence-specific nuclear export of incompletely spliced HIV-2 RNA species.
Book

Hematology of Infancy and Childhood

TL;DR: History neonatal haematology bone marrow failure disorders of erythrocyte production haemolytic anemias disorders of haemoglobin the phagocyte system the immune system oncology haemostasis genetics supportive theory haem atologic manifestations of systemic diseases.
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