A major limitation of gene therapy for sickle cell disease (SCD) is the availability and access to a potentially curative one-time treatment, due to high treatment costs. We have developed a high-titer bifunctional lentiviral vector (LVV) in a vector backbone that has reduced size, high vector yields, and efficient gene transfer to human CD34+ hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs). This LVV contains locus control region cores expressing an anti-sickling βAS3-globin gene and two microRNA-adapted short hairpin RNA simultaneously targeting BCL11A and ZNF410 transcripts to maximally induce fetal hemoglobin (HbF) expression. This LVV induces high levels of anti-sickling hemoglobins (HbAAS3 + HbF), while concurrently decreasing sickle hemoglobin (HbS). The decrease in HbS and increased anti-sickling hemoglobin impedes deoxygenated HbS polymerization and red blood cell sickling at low vector copy per cell in transduced SCD patient CD34+ cells differentiated into erythrocytes. The dual alterations in red cell hemoglobins ameliorated the SCD phenotype in the SCD Berkeley mouse model in vivo. With high titer and enhanced transduction of HSPC at a low multiplicity of infection, this LVV will increase the number of patient doses of vector from production lots to decrease costs and help improve accessibility to gene therapy for SCD.
Keywords: BCL11A; anti-sickling hemoglobin; gene therapy; hematopoietic stem cells; lentiviral vector; shmiR; sickle cell disease.
© 2024 The Author(s).