At a glance:
A new gene therapy is designed to treat the life-threatening disorder no matter which specific genetic mutation a patient has.
The therapy is ready to test in clinical trials.
Work offers proof of concept that gene therapies can treat disease by targeting a shared problem that various individual mutations lead to.
Efforts to develop a gene therapy for Diamond-Blackfan anemia (DBA) — a rare, life-threatening disorder in which bone marrow cannot make mature, functioning red blood cells — have been hampered by the fact that at least 30 different genetic mutations can cause the disorder.
A team led by researchers at Harvard Medical School has now cleared that obstacle by developing a universal gene therapy for DBA, one designed to correct the bone marrow defect no matter the patient’s specific mutation.
The experimental therapy is ready to test in clinical trials, the team reports Nov. 11 in Cell Stem Cell.
“This is one of first examples where we can develop a gene therapy that can target dozens of mutations with a single vector,” said senior author Vijay Sankaran, the HMS Jan Ellen Paradise, MD Professor of Pediatrics at Boston Children’s.
Authorship, funding, disclosures
Additional authors included Xiaotian Liao, Alexis Caulier, Mateusz Antoszewski, Blake Cohen, Myriam Armant, Henry Y. Lu, Travis J. Fleming, Elena Kamal, Lara Wahlster, Aoife M. Roche, John K. Everett, Angelina Petrichenko, Mei-Mei Huang, William Clarke, Kasiani C. Myers, Craig Forester, Antonio Perez-Atayde, Frederic D. Bushman, Danilo Pellin, Akiko Shimamura, and David A. Williams.
Sankaran serves as an advisor to Ensoma, unrelated to the present work. Voit and Sankaran are named as inventors on patent PCT/US2020/036600 filed by Boston Children’s Hospital related to this approach.
This work was supported by a Blavatnik Therapeutics Challenge Award; the Translational Research Program at Boston Children’s; the Drug, Device, and Diagnostic Accelerator at Boston Children’s; the DBA Foundation; Friends of DBA; DBA Canada; the Friends of Oliver Foundation; the New York Stem Cell Foundation; and the National Institutes of Health (grants R01DK103794, R01HL146500, K08CA286756). Voit is supported by the Edward P. Evans Foundation, the Alex’s Lemonade Stand Foundation, the Julia’s Wings Foundation, the Office of Faculty Development at Boston Children’s Hospital, and the Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas, and he is a Horchow Family Endowed Scholar in Pediatrics at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. Fleming is supported by the Boettcher Foundation and the Garbarini Memorial Fund. Sankaran is an Investigator of the Howard Hughes Medical Institute and is supported by the Jan Ellen Paradise, MD Professorship in Pediatrics.