A novel 'sort-suicide' fusion gene vector for T cell manipulation

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Abstract

Retroviral suicide gene vectors have successfully been used in clinical studies to improve the safety of adoptive immunotherapy with allogeneic T lymphocytes in the treatment of malignant and viral diseases. At the same time these studies have revealed several problems that are yet to be resolved including impaired T cell function due to long ex vivo culture. Here we present new retroviral vectors co-expressing truncated CD34, a gene transfer marker which ensures rapid enrichment of transduced cells using commercially available GMP-approved devices, and a splice-corrected variant of Herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase (scHSVtk) which confers high sensitivity to the prodrug ganciclovir. We show that a retroviral hybrid vector, MP71, based on the myeloproliferative sarcoma virus (MPSV) and the murine embryonic stem cell virus (MESV), encoding a tCD34/scHSVtk fusion protein mediates high expression of the 'sort-suicide' selection marker, thereby allowing for highly efficient purification and selective elimination of transduced cells.

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Fehse, B., Kustikova, O. S., Li, Z., Wahlers, A., Bohn, W., Beyer, W. R., … Baum, C. (2002). A novel “sort-suicide” fusion gene vector for T cell manipulation. Gene Therapy, 9(23), 1633–1638. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.gt.3301828

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