By Diane Krause MD, PhD
2009-09-01
Dr.
Krause indicated no relevant conflicts of interest.
Raya A, Rodríguez-Pizà I, Guenechea G, et al. Disease-corrected
haematopoietic progenitors from Fanconi anaemia induced pluripotent stem cells
Nature. 2009;460:53-9.
Optimal
therapy for patients with genetic hematologic diseases would be to take the
patient’s own cells, correct the genetic abnormality, and return the cells to
the patient for long-term functional engraftment. Such therapy would require a
combination of cell and gene therapy. In this paper, investigators from the
laboratories of Juan Carlos Izpisúa-Belmonte in Barcelona and Juan Antonio
Bueren in Madrid published proof-of-principle studies showing that cells from
patients with Fanconi anemia (FA) can be genetically repaired and reprogrammed
into inducible pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, which can then be guided to
differentiate down the hematopoietic lineage in vitro.
FA is characterized by genomic instability and hypersensitivity
to DNA damage. Patients generally present in childhood with anemia and/or
susceptibility to infection and subsequently progress to complete bone marrow
failure. Also, the increased susceptibility to DNA damage throughout the body
increases the risk for developing solid malignancies. The iPS studies presented
here present an option for repairing the hematopoietic system of these patients
but not their other cells types. Bone marrow transplantation has been used to
treat FA but is hampered by the risks of performing allogeneic transplantation as well as the high toxicity of
chemotherapy in patients with FA.
iPS cells can be derived from skin fibroblasts and other
dividing somatic cell types in vitro by introducing specific genes or
gene products that reprogram the mature somatic cell nuclei so that the gene-expression
pattern is modified to mirror that of embryonic stem (ES) cells. The most
widely used current protocols use viral vectors to transfer four specific
genes: OCT4, SOX2, KLF4, and c-MYC. Similar to ES cells, iPS cells can grow
indefinitely in the laboratory and have the capacity, under specific in
vitro conditions, to differentiate down every cellular lineage, including
the hematopoietic lineage. In this work, the investigators were unable to
reprogram skin fibroblasts from patients with FA into iPS cells unless they
first “repaired” the genetic mutation by introducing a normal copy of the
mutant FA gene. Cells were successfully reprogrammed only after the normal FA complex
was restored; this teaches us new information regarding the genes required for
iPS formation. The new iPS cell lines no longer showed a hypersensitivity to
DNA-damaging agents. More importantly, hematopoietic cells derived from these
patient-specific iPS cells also showed normal DNA repair in response to
DNA-damaging agents.
There are significant hurdles to overcome before such an
approach could be used therapeutically for humans with hematologic diseases.
First, iPS cells will need to be safe. The goal is to develop iPS cells without
permanent incorporation of the reprogramming genes (several of which are
oncogenes), and to be able to differentiate the cells into entirely normal
hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells that can reconstitute the hematopoietic
system in the long term without any risk of malignancy. Investigators have
succeeded in reprogramming adult somatic cells into iPS cells using either
adenoviral vectors, which do not incorporate into the genome and eventually are
lost, or with purified proteins that have been engineered to cross the cell
membrane, and are thus only transiently available to reprogram the nucleus.
However, even without permanent incorporation of the exogenous transgenes, the
resultant iPS cells are still immortalized pluripotent cells that can form teratomas
in vivo and can mutate in culture over time. Second, even though iPS can
be differentiated into all types of blood cells in vitro, we do not yet
know how to differentiate ES or iPS cells into normal, long-term,
reconstituting hematopoietic stem cells.
Thus, in genetic diseases, such as FA, it is
possible to create patient-specific skin fibroblasts in which the mutation has
been corrected and to then convert them into iPS cells, which later can be
differentiated into blood cells. This new therapeutic strategy can be applied
to many other genetic diseases by first correcting and then differentiating iPS
cells into healthy tissues that these patients lack.
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