Hematopoietic Stem Cell Gene Therapy for Brain Metastases Using Myeloid Cell–Specific Gene Promoters

Author:

Andreou Tereza1ORCID,Rippaus Nora1,Wronski Krzysztof1,Williams Jennifer1,Taggart David1ORCID,Cherqui Stephanie2,Sunderland Ashley1ORCID,Kartika Yolanda D1ORCID,Egnuni Teklu1,Brownlie Rebecca J1ORCID,Mathew Ryan K13ORCID,Holmen Sheri L4ORCID,Fife Christopher1,Droop Alastair5ORCID,Lorger Mihaela1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK

2. Department of Pediatrics, University of California San Diego, CA

3. Department of Neurosurgery, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Leeds, UK

4. Huntsman Cancer Institute, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT

5. Leeds Institute for Data Analytics, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK

Abstract

Abstract Background Brain metastases (BrM) develop in 20–40% of cancer patients and represent an unmet clinical need. Limited access of drugs into the brain because of the blood-brain barrier is at least partially responsible for therapeutic failure, necessitating improved drug delivery systems. Methods Green fluorescent protein (GFP)-transduced murine and nontransduced human hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) were administered into mice (n = 10 and 3). The HSC progeny in mouse BrM and in patient-derived BrM tissue (n = 6) was characterized by flow cytometry and immunofluorescence. Promoters driving gene expression, specifically within the BrM-infiltrating HSC progeny, were identified through differential gene-expression analysis and subsequent validation of a series of promoter-green fluorescent protein-reporter constructs in mice (n = 5). One of the promoters was used to deliver tumor necrosis factor–related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) to BrM in mice (n = 17/21 for TRAIL vs control group). Results HSC progeny (consisting mostly of macrophages) efficiently homed to macrometastases (mean [SD] = 37.6% [7.2%] of all infiltrating cells for murine HSC progeny; 27.9% mean [SD] = 27.9% [4.9%] of infiltrating CD45+ hematopoietic cells for human HSC progeny) and micrometastases in mice (19.3–53.3% of all macrophages for murine HSCs). Macrophages were also abundant in patient-derived BrM tissue (mean [SD] = 8.8% [7.8%]). Collectively, this provided a rationale to optimize the delivery of gene therapy to BrM within myeloid cells. MMP14 promoter emerged as the strongest promoter construct capable of limiting gene expression to BrM-infiltrating myeloid cells in mice. TRAIL delivered under MMP14 promoter statistically significantly prolonged survival in mice (mean [SD] = 19.0 [3.4] vs mean [SD] = 15.0 [2.0] days for TRAIL vs control group; two-sided P = .006), demonstrating therapeutic and translational potential of our approach. Conclusions Our study establishes HSC gene therapy using a myeloid cell–specific promoter as a new strategy to target BrM. This approach, with strong translational value, has potential to overcome the blood-brain barrier, target micrometastases, and control multifocal lesions.

Funder

California Breast Cancer Research Program

Innovative Developmental and Exploratory Award

IDEA

European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme

Yorkshire Cancer Research award

Brain Tumour Research and Support across Yorkshire award

CRUK Centre Leeds funding

Biomedical and Health Research Centre

National Cancer Institute

Brain Tumour Charity

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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