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Dive into the research topics where Michael L. Kaufman is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael L. Kaufman.


Blood | 2015

Correction of the sickle-cell disease mutation in human hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells

Megan D. Hoban; Gregory J. Cost; Matthew C. Mendel; Zulema Romero; Michael L. Kaufman; Alok V. Joglekar; Michelle Ho; Dianne Lumaquin; David Gray; Georgia R. Lill; Aaron R. Cooper; Fabrizia Urbinati; Shantha Senadheera; Allen Zhu; Pei-Qi Liu; David Paschon; Lei Zhang; Edward J. Rebar; Andrew Wilber; Xiaoyan Wang; Philip D. Gregory; Michael C. Holmes; Andreas Reik; Roger P. Hollis; Donald B. Kohn

Sickle cell disease (SCD) is characterized by a single point mutation in the seventh codon of the β-globin gene. Site-specific correction of the sickle mutation in hematopoietic stem cells would allow for permanent production of normal red blood cells. Using zinc-finger nucleases (ZFNs) designed to flank the sickle mutation, we demonstrate efficient targeted cleavage at the β-globin locus with minimal off-target modification. By co-delivering a homologous donor template (either an integrase-defective lentiviral vector or a DNA oligonucleotide), high levels of gene modification were achieved in CD34(+) hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells. Modified cells maintained their ability to engraft NOD/SCID/IL2rγ(null) mice and to produce cells from multiple lineages, although with a reduction in the modification levels relative to the in vitro samples. Importantly, ZFN-driven gene correction in CD34(+) cells from the bone marrow of patients with SCD resulted in the production of wild-type hemoglobin tetramers.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2013

β-globin gene transfer to human bone marrow for sickle cell disease

Zulema Romero; Fabrizia Urbinati; Sabine Geiger; Aaron R. Cooper; Jennifer Wherley; Michael L. Kaufman; Roger P. Hollis; Rafael Ruiz de Assin; Shantha Senadheera; Arineh Sahagian; Xiangyang Jin; Alyse Gellis; Xiaoyan Wang; David W. Gjertson; Satiro deOliveira; Pamela Kempert; Sally Shupien; Hisham Abdel-Azim; Mark C. Walters; Herbert J. Meiselman; Rosalinda B. Wenby; Theresa Gruber; Victor J. Marder; Thomas D. Coates; Donald B. Kohn

Autologous hematopoietic stem cell gene therapy is an approach to treating sickle cell disease (SCD) patients that may result in lower morbidity than allogeneic transplantation. We examined the potential of a lentiviral vector (LV) (CCL-βAS3-FB) encoding a human hemoglobin (HBB) gene engineered to impede sickle hemoglobin polymerization (HBBAS3) to transduce human BM CD34+ cells from SCD donors and prevent sickling of red blood cells produced by in vitro differentiation. The CCL-βAS3-FB LV transduced BM CD34+ cells from either healthy or SCD donors at similar levels, based on quantitative PCR and colony-forming unit progenitor analysis. Consistent expression of HBBAS3 mRNA and HbAS3 protein compromised a fourth of the total β-globin-like transcripts and hemoglobin (Hb) tetramers. Upon deoxygenation, a lower percentage of HBBAS3-transduced red blood cells exhibited sickling compared with mock-transduced cells from sickle donors. Transduced BM CD34+ cells were transplanted into immunodeficient mice, and the human cells recovered after 2-3 months were cultured for erythroid differentiation, which showed levels of HBBAS3 mRNA similar to those seen in the CD34+ cells that were directly differentiated in vitro. These results demonstrate that the CCL-βAS3-FB LV is capable of efficient transfer and consistent expression of an effective anti-sickling β-globin gene in human SCD BM CD34+ progenitor cells, improving physiologic parameters of the resulting red blood cells.


Molecular Therapy | 2014

Preclinical Demonstration of Lentiviral Vector-mediated Correction of Immunological and Metabolic Abnormalities in Models of Adenosine Deaminase Deficiency

Denise A. Carbonaro; Lin Zhang; Xiangyang Jin; Claudia Montiel-Equihua; Sabine Geiger; Marlene Carmo; Aaron R. Cooper; Lynette Fairbanks; Michael L. Kaufman; Nj Sebire; Roger P. Hollis; Michael P. Blundell; Shantha Senadheera; Pei Yu Fu; Arineh Sahaghian; Rebecca Chan; Xiaoyan Wang; Kenneth Cornetta; Adrian J. Thrasher; Donald B. Kohn; H. Bobby Gaspar

Gene transfer into autologous hematopoietic stem cells by γ-retroviral vectors (gRV) is an effective treatment for adenosine deaminase (ADA)-deficient severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID). However, current gRV have significant potential for insertional mutagenesis as reported in clinical trials for other primary immunodeficiencies. To improve the efficacy and safety of ADA-SCID gene therapy (GT), we generated a self-inactivating lentiviral vector (LV) with a codon-optimized human cADA gene under the control of the short form elongation factor-1α promoter (LV EFS ADA). In ADA(-/-) mice, LV EFS ADA displayed high-efficiency gene transfer and sufficient ADA expression to rescue ADA(-/-) mice from their lethal phenotype with good thymic and peripheral T- and B-cell reconstitution. Human ADA-deficient CD34(+) cells transduced with 1-5 × 10(7) TU/ml had 1-3 vector copies/cell and expressed 1-2x of normal endogenous levels of ADA, as assayed in vitro and by transplantation into immune-deficient mice. Importantly, in vitro immortalization assays demonstrated that LV EFS ADA had significantly less transformation potential compared to gRV vectors, and vector integration-site analysis by nrLAM-PCR of transduced human cells grown in immune-deficient mice showed no evidence of clonal skewing. These data demonstrated that the LV EFS ADA vector can effectively transfer the human ADA cDNA and promote immune and metabolic recovery, while reducing the potential for vector-mediated insertional mutagenesis.


Molecular Therapy | 2013

Allelic Exclusion and Peripheral Reconstitution by TCR Transgenic T Cells Arising From Transduced Human Hematopoietic Stem/Progenitor Cells

Francesca Giannoni; Cinnamon L Hardee; Jennifer Wherley; Eric Gschweng; Shantha Senadheera; Michael L. Kaufman; Rebecca Chan; Ingrid Bahner; Vivian H. Gersuk; Xiaoyan Wang; David W. Gjertson; David Baltimore; Owen N. Witte; James S. Economou; Antoni Ribas; Donald B. Kohn

Transduction and transplantation of human hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPC) with the genes for a T-cell receptor (TCR) that recognizes a tumor-associated antigen may lead to sustained long-term production of T cells expressing the TCR and confer specific antitumor activity. We evaluated this using a lentiviral vector (CCLc-MND-F5) carrying cDNA for a human TCR specific for an HLA-A*0201-restricted peptide of Melanoma Antigen Recognized by T cells (MART-1). CD34(+) HSPC were transduced with the F5 TCR lentiviral vector or mock transduced and transplanted into neonatal NSG mice or NSG mice transgenic for human HLA-A*0201 (NSG-A2). Human CD8(+) and CD4(+) T cells expressing the human F5 TCR were present in the thymus, spleen, and peripheral blood after 4-5 months. Expression of human HLA-A*0201 in NSG-A2 recipient mice led to significantly increased numbers of human CD8(+) and CD4(+) T cells expressing the F5 TCR, compared with control NSG recipients. Transduction of the human CD34(+) HSPC by the F5 TCR transgene caused a high degree of allelic exclusion, potently suppressing rearrangement of endogenous human TCR-β genes during thymopoiesis. In summary, we demonstrated the feasibility of engineering human HSPC to express a tumor-specific TCR to serve as a long-term source of tumor-targeted mature T cells for immunotherapy of melanoma.


Blood | 2012

Gene therapy/bone marrow transplantation in ADA-deficient mice: Roles of enzyme-replacement therapy and cytoreduction

Denise A. Carbonaro; Xiangyang Jin; Xingchao Wang; Xiao-Jin Yu; Rozengurt N; Michael L. Kaufman; David W. Gjertson; Yang Zhou; Michael R. Blackburn; Donald B. Kohn

Gene therapy (GT) for adenosine deaminase-deficient severe combined immune deficiency (ADA-SCID) can provide significant long-term benefit when patients are given nonmyeloablative conditioning and ADA enzyme-replacement therapy (ERT) is withheld before autologous transplantation of γ-retroviral vector-transduced BM CD34+ cells. To determine the contributions of conditioning and discontinuation of ERT to the therapeutic effects, we analyzed these factors in Ada gene knockout mice (Ada(-/-)). Mice were transplanted with ADA-deficient marrow transduced with an ADA-expressing γ-retroviral vector without preconditioning or after 200 cGy or 900 cGy total-body irradiation and evaluated after 4 months. In all tissues analyzed, vector copy numbers (VCNs) were 100- to 1000-fold greater in mice receiving 900 cGy compared with 200 cGy (P < .05). In mice receiving 200 cGy, VCN was similar whether ERT was stopped or given for 1 or 4 months after GT. In unconditioned mice, there was decreased survival with and without ERT, and VCN was very low to undetectable. When recipients were conditioned with 200 cGy and received transduced lineage-depleted marrow, only recipients receiving ERT (1 or 4 months) had detectable vector sequences in thymocytes. In conclusion, cytoreduction is important for the engraftment of gene-transduced HSC, and short-term ERT after GT did not diminish the capacity of gene-corrected cells to engraft and persist.


Experimental Hematology | 2015

Potentially therapeutic levels of anti-sickling globin gene expression following lentivirus-mediated gene transfer in sickle cell disease bone marrow CD34+ cells

Fabrizia Urbinati; Phillip W. Hargrove; Sabine Geiger; Zulema Romero; Jennifer Wherley; Michael L. Kaufman; Roger P. Hollis; Christopher B. Chambers; Derek A. Persons; Donald B. Kohn; Andrew Wilber

Sickle cell disease (SCD) can be cured by allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant. However, this is only possible when a matched donor is available, making the development of gene therapy using autologous hematopoietic stem cells a highly desirable alternative. We used a culture model of human erythropoiesis to directly compare two insulated, self-inactivating, and erythroid-specific lentiviral vectors, encoding for γ-globin (V5m3-400) or a modified β-globin (βAS3-FB) for production of antisickling hemoglobin (Hb) and correction of red cell deformability after deoxygenation. Bone marrow CD34+ cells from three SCD patients were transduced using V5m3-400 or βAS3-FB and compared with mock-transduced SCD or healthy donor CD34+ cells. Lentiviral transduction did not impair cell growth or differentiation, as gauged by proliferation and acquisition of erythroid markers. Vector copy number averaged approximately one copy per cell, and corrective globin mRNA levels were increased more than sevenfold over mock-transduced controls. Erythroblasts derived from healthy donor and mock-transduced SCD cells produced a low level of fetal Hb that was increased to 23.6 ± 4.1% per vector copy for cells transduced with V5m3-400. Equivalent levels of modified normal adult Hb of 17.6 ± 3.8% per vector copy were detected for SCD cells transduced with βAS3-FB. These levels of antisickling Hb production were sufficient to reduce sickling of terminal-stage red blood cells upon deoxygenation. We concluded that the achieved levels of fetal Hb and modified normal adult Hb would likely prove therapeutic to SCD patients who lack matched donors.


Stem Cells | 2015

Enrichment of Human Hematopoietic Stem/Progenitor Cells Facilitates Transduction for Stem Cell Gene Therapy

Kismet M Baldwin; Fabrizia Urbinati; Zulema Romero; Beatriz Campo-Fernandez; Michael L. Kaufman; Aaron R. Cooper; Katelyn Masiuk; Roger P. Hollis; Donald B. Kohn

Autologous hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) gene therapy for sickle cell disease has the potential to treat this illness without the major immunological complications associated with allogeneic transplantation. However, transduction efficiency by β‐globin lentiviral vectors using CD34‐enriched cell populations is suboptimal and large vector production batches may be needed for clinical trials. Transducing a cell population more enriched for HSC could greatly reduce vector needs and, potentially, increase transduction efficiency. CD34+/CD38− cells, comprising ∼1%–3% of all CD34+ cells, were isolated from healthy cord blood CD34+ cells by fluorescence‐activated cell sorting and transduced with a lentiviral vector expressing an antisickling form of beta‐globin (CCL‐βAS3‐FB). Isolated CD34+/CD38− cells were able to generate progeny over an extended period of long‐term culture (LTC) compared to the CD34+ cells and required up to 40‐fold less vector for transduction compared to bulk CD34+ preparations containing an equivalent number of CD34+/CD38− cells. Transduction of isolated CD34+/CD38− cells was comparable to CD34+ cells measured by quantitative PCR at day 14 with reduced vector needs, and average vector copy/cell remained higher over time for LTC initiated from CD34+/38− cells. Following in vitro erythroid differentiation, HBBAS3 mRNA expression was similar in cultures derived from CD34+/CD38− cells or unfractionated CD34+ cells. In vivo studies showed equivalent engraftment of transduced CD34+/CD38− cells when transplanted in competition with 100‐fold more CD34+/CD38+ cells. This work provides initial evidence for the beneficial effects from isolating human CD34+/CD38− cells to use significantly less vector and potentially improve transduction for HSC gene therapy. Stem Cells 2015;33:1532–1542


Cancer Research | 2014

HSV-sr39TK positron emission tomography and suicide gene elimination of human hematopoietic stem cells and their progeny in humanized mice.

Eric Gschweng; Melissa N. McCracken; Michael L. Kaufman; Michelle Ho; Roger P. Hollis; Xiaoyan Wang; Navdeep Saini; Richard C. Koya; Thinle Chodon; Antoni Ribas; Owen N. Witte; Donald B. Kohn

Engineering immunity against cancer by the adoptive transfer of hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) modified to express antigen-specific T-cell receptors (TCR) or chimeric antigen receptors generates a continual supply of effector T cells, potentially providing superior anticancer efficacy compared with the infusion of terminally differentiated T cells. Here, we demonstrate the in vivo generation of functional effector T cells from CD34-enriched human peripheral blood stem cells modified with a lentiviral vector designed for clinical use encoding a TCR recognizing the cancer/testes antigen NY-ESO-1, coexpressing the PET/suicide gene sr39TK. Ex vivo analysis of T cells showed antigen- and HLA-restricted effector function against melanoma. Robust engraftment of gene-modified human cells was demonstrated with PET reporter imaging in hematopoietic niches such as femurs, humeri, vertebrae, and the thymus. Safety was demonstrated by the in vivo ablation of PET signal, NY-ESO-1-TCR-bearing cells, and integrated lentiviral vector genomes upon treatment with ganciclovir, but not with vehicle control. Our study provides support for the efficacy and safety of gene-modified HSCs as a therapeutic modality for engineered cancer immunotherapy. Cancer Res; 74(18); 5173-83. ©2014 AACR.


Molecular therapy. Nucleic acids | 2016

Reactivating Fetal Hemoglobin Expression in Human Adult Erythroblasts Through BCL11A Knockdown Using Targeted Endonucleases

Carmen Flores Bjurström; Michelle Mojadidi; J. L. Phillips; Caroline Y. Kuo; Stephen Lai; Georgia R. Lill; Aaron R. Cooper; Michael L. Kaufman; Fabrizia Urbinati; Xiaoyan Wang; Roger P. Hollis; Donald B. Kohn

We examined the efficiency, specificity, and mutational signatures of zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs), transcriptional activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs), and clustered regularly interspaced short palindromic repeat (CRISPR)/Cas9 systems designed to target the gene encoding the transcriptional repressor BCL11A, in human K562 cells and human CD34+ progenitor cells. ZFNs and TALENs were delivered as in vitro transcribed mRNA through electroporation; CRISPR/Cas9 was codelivered by Cas9 mRNA with plasmid-encoded guideRNA (gRNA) (pU6.g1) or in vitro transcribed gRNA (gR.1). Analyses of efficacy revealed that for these specific reagents and the delivery methods used, the ZFNs gave rise to more allelic disruption in the targeted locus compared to the TALENs and CRISPR/Cas9, which was associated with increased levels of fetal hemoglobin in erythroid cells produced in vitro from nuclease-treated CD34+ cells. Genome-wide analysis to evaluate the specificity of the nucleases revealed high specificity of this specific ZFN to the target site, while specific TALENs and CRISPRs evaluated showed off-target cleavage activity. ZFN gene-edited CD34+ cells had the capacity to engraft in NOD-PrkdcSCID-IL2Rγnull mice, while retaining multi-lineage potential, in contrast to TALEN gene-edited CD34+ cells. CRISPR engraftment levels mirrored the increased relative plasmid-mediated toxicity of pU6.g1/Cas9 in hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPCs), highlighting the value for the further improvements of CRISPR/Cas9 delivery in primary human HSPCs.


Molecular therapy. Methods & clinical development | 2015

The human ankyrin 1 promoter insulator sustains gene expression in a β-globin lentiviral vector in hematopoietic stem cells.

Zulema Romero; Beatriz Campo-Fernandez; Jennifer Wherley; Michael L. Kaufman; Fabrizia Urbinati; Aaron R. Cooper; Megan D. Hoban; Kismet M Baldwin; Dianne Lumaquin; Xiaoyan Wang; Shantha Senadheera; Roger P. Hollis; Donald B. Kohn

Lentiviral vectors designed for the treatment of the hemoglobinopathies require the inclusion of regulatory and strong enhancer elements to achieve sufficient expression of the β-globin transgene. Despite the inclusion of these elements, the efficacy of these vectors may be limited by transgene silencing due to the genomic environment surrounding the integration site. Barrier insulators can be used to give more consistent expression and resist silencing even with lower vector copies. Here, the barrier activity of an insulator element from the human ankyrin-1 gene was analyzed in a lentiviral vector carrying an antisickling human β-globin gene. Inclusion of a single copy of the Ankyrin insulator did not affect viral titer, and improved the consistency of expression from the vector in murine erythroleukemia cells. The presence of the Ankyrin insulator element did not change transgene expression in human hematopoietic cells in short-term erythroid culture or in vivo in primary murine transplants. However, analysis in secondary recipients showed that the lentiviral vector with the Ankyrin element preserved transgene expression, whereas expression from the vector lacking the Ankyrin insulator decreased in secondary recipients. These studies demonstrate that the Ankyrin insulator may improve long-term β-globin expression in hematopoietic stem cells for gene therapy of hemoglobinopathies.

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Donald B. Kohn

University of California

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Xiaoyan Wang

University of California

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Zulema Romero

University of California

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Megan D. Hoban

University of California

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Sabine Geiger

University of California

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