Primary immunodeficiency diseases (PIDs) are a group of rare inherited disorders affecting the immune system that can be conventionally treated with allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation and with experimental autologous gene therapy. With both approaches still facing important challenges, gene editing has recently emerged as a potential valuable alternative for the treatment of genetic disorders and within a relatively short period from its initial development, has already entered some landmark clinical trials aimed at tackling several life-threatening diseases. In this review, we discuss the progress made towards the development of gene editing-based therapeutic strategies for PIDs with a special focus on Wiskott - Aldrich syndrome and outline their main challenges as well as future directions with respect to already established treatments.
During the last few years, gene editing has emerged as a powerful tool for the therapeutic correction of monogenic diseases. CRISPR/Cas9 applied to hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) has shown great promise in proof-of-principle preclinical studies to treat haematological disorders, and clinical trials using these tools are now underway. Nonetheless, there remain important challenges that need to be addressed, such as the efficiency of targeting primitive, long-term repopulating HSPCs and expand them in vitro for clinical purposes. Here we have tested the effect exerted by different culture media compositions on the ability of HSPCs to proliferate and undergo homology directed repair-mediated knock-in of a reporter gene, while preserving their stemness features during ex-vivo culture. We tested different combinations of compounds and demonstrated that by supplementing the culture media with inhibitors of histone deacetylases, and/or by fine-tuning its cytokine composition it is possible to achieve high levels of gene targeting in long-term repopulating HSPCs both in vitro and in vivo, with a beneficial balance between preservation of stemness and cell expansion, thus allowing to obtain a significant amount of edited, primitive HSPCs compared to established, state-of-the-art culture conditions. Overall, the implantation of this optimized ex vivo HSPC culture protocol will improve the efficacy, feasibility and applicability of gene editing and will likely provide one step further to unlock the full therapeutic potential of such powerful technology.
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