A highly efficient short hairpin RNA potently down-regulates CCR5 expression in systemic lymphoid organs in the hu-BLT mouse model

Author:

Shimizu Saki12,Hong Patrick23,Arumugam Balamurugan23,Pokomo Lauren12,Boyer Joshua12,Koizumi Naoya12,Kittipongdaja Panyamol12,Chen Angela4,Bristol Greg12,Galic Zoran12,Zack Jerome A.123,Yang Otto23,Chen Irvin S. Y.123,Lee Benhur23,An Dong Sung12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine, Division of Hematology-Oncology,

2. UCLA AIDS Institute, and

3. Departments of Microbiology, Immunology and Molecular Genetics and

4. Obstetrics & Gynecology, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles

Abstract

AbstractInhibiting the expression of the HIV-1 coreceptor CCR5 holds great promise for controlling HIV-1 infection in patients. Here we report stable knockdown of human CCR5 by a short hairpin RNA (shRNA) in a humanized bone marrow/liver/thymus (BLT) mouse model. We delivered a potent shRNA against CCR5 into human fetal liver-derived CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor/stem cells (HPSCs) by lentiviral vector transduction. We transplanted vector-transduced HPSCs solidified with Matrigel and a thymus segment under the mouse kidney capsule. Vector-transduced autologous CD34+ cells were subsequently injected in the irradiated mouse, intended to create systemic reconstitution. CCR5 expression was down-regulated in human T cells and monocytes/macrophages in systemic lymphoid tissues, including gut-associated lymphoid tissue, the major site of HIV-1 replication. The shRNA-mediated CCR5 knockdown had no apparent adverse effects on T-cell development as assessed by polyclonal T-cell receptor Vβ family development and naive/memory T-cell differentiation. CCR5 knockdown in the secondary transplanted mice suggested the potential of long-term hematopoietic reconstitution by the shRNA-transduced HPSCs. CCR5 tropic HIV-1 infection was effectively inhibited in mouse-derived human splenocytes ex vivo. These results demonstrate that lentiviral vector delivery of shRNA into human HPSCs could stably down-regulate CCR5 in systemic lymphoid organs in vivo.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Cell Biology,Hematology,Immunology,Biochemistry

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