Abstract

Lentiviral gene transfer vectors have a number of potential advantages over gammaretroviral vectors including more efficient transduction of nondividing cells, a more favorable integration site profile, and the ability to accommodate large transgenes. Here, we present long-term follow-up data of animals that received lentivirus-transduced CD34-enriched cells. Six long-term surviving dogs were available for analysis. Transgene expression was analyzed from at least 12 months to more than 5 years after transplantation in peripheral blood cells and multiple cell lineages. All animals demonstrated long-term stable transgene expression in peripheral blood myeloid, lymphoid, and red blood cells as well as in platelets. Vector integration sites were analyzed by linear amplification-mediated polymerase chain reaction and showed a polyclonal repopulation pattern in all animals. There was no evidence of any development of monoclonality or leukemia in the animals. The stable long-term multilineage transgene expression, together with detection of the same integration site in myeloid and lymphoid cells, strongly suggests the transduction of long-term repopulating stem cells. Our data demonstrate safe and efficient transduction of multilineage long-term repopulating cells with lentiviral vectors and support the use of such vectors for gene therapy studies in patients.

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