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Dive into the research topics where Roman Galetto is active.

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Featured researches published by Roman Galetto.


Current Gene Therapy | 2011

Meganucleases and Other Tools for Targeted Genome Engineering: Perspectives and Challenges for Gene Therapy

George H. Silva; Laurent Poirot; Roman Galetto; Julianne Smith; Guillermo Montoya; Philippe Duchateau; Frédéric Paques

The importance of safer approaches for gene therapy has been underscored by a series of severe adverse events (SAEs) observed in patients involved in clinical trials for Severe Combined Immune Deficiency Disease (SCID) and Chromic Granulomatous Disease (CGD). While a new generation of viral vectors is in the process of replacing the classical gamma-retrovirus–based approach, a number of strategies have emerged based on non-viral vectorization and/or targeted insertion aimed at achieving safer gene transfer. Currently, these methods display lower efficacies than viral transduction although many of them can yield more than 1% engineered cells in vitro. Nuclease-based approaches, wherein an endonuclease is used to trigger site-specific genome editing, can significantly increase the percentage of targeted cells. These methods therefore provide a real alternative to classical gene transfer as well as gene editing. However, the first endonuclease to be in clinic today is not used for gene transfer, but to inactivate a gene (CCR5) required for HIV infection. Here, we review these alternative approaches, with a special emphasis on meganucleases, a family of naturally occurring rare-cutting endonucleases, and speculate on their current and future potential.


Nucleic Acids Research | 2012

Chromosomal context and epigenetic mechanisms control the efficacy of genome editing by rare-cutting designer endonucleases

Fayza Daboussi; Mikhail Zaslavskiy; Laurent Poirot; Mariana Loperfido; Agnès Gouble; Valérie Guyot; Sophie Leduc; Roman Galetto; Sylvestre Grizot; Danusia Oficjalska; Christophe Perez; Fabien Delacôte; Aurélie Dupuy; Isabelle Chion-Sotinel; Diane Le Clerre; Céline Lebuhotel; Olivier Danos; Frédéric Lemaire; Kahina Oussedik; Frédéric Cédrone; Jean-Charles Epinat; Julianne Smith; Rafael J. Yáñez-Muñoz; George Dickson; Linda Popplewell; Taeyoung Koo; Thierry Vandendriessche; Marinee K. Chuah; Aymeric Duclert; Philippe Duchateau

The ability to specifically engineer the genome of living cells at precise locations using rare-cutting designer endonucleases has broad implications for biotechnology and medicine, particularly for functional genomics, transgenics and gene therapy. However, the potential impact of chromosomal context and epigenetics on designer endonuclease-mediated genome editing is poorly understood. To address this question, we conducted a comprehensive analysis on the efficacy of 37 endonucleases derived from the quintessential I-CreI meganuclease that were specifically designed to cleave 39 different genomic targets. The analysis revealed that the efficiency of targeted mutagenesis at a given chromosomal locus is predictive of that of homologous gene targeting. Consequently, a strong genome-wide correlation was apparent between the efficiency of targeted mutagenesis (≤0.1% to ∼6%) with that of homologous gene targeting (≤0.1% to ∼15%). In contrast, the efficiency of targeted mutagenesis or homologous gene targeting at a given chromosomal locus does not correlate with the activity of individual endonucleases on transiently transfected substrates. Finally, we demonstrate that chromatin accessibility modulates the efficacy of rare-cutting endonucleases, accounting for strong position effects. Thus, chromosomal context and epigenetic mechanisms may play a major role in the efficiency rare-cutting endonuclease-induced genome engineering.


Expert Opinion on Biological Therapy | 2009

Targeted approaches for gene therapy and the emergence of engineered meganucleases

Roman Galetto; Philippe Duchateau; Frédéric Pâques

Background: In spite of significant advances in gene transfer strategies in the field of gene therapy, there is a strong emphasis on the development of alternative methods, providing better control of transgene expression and insertion patterns. Objective: Several new approaches consist of targeting a desired transgene or gene modification in a well defined locus, and we collectively refer to them as ‘targeted approaches’. The use of redesigned meganucleases is one of these emerging technologies. Here we try to define the potential of this method, in the larger scope of targeted strategies. Methods: We survey the different types of targeted strategies, presenting the achievements and the potential applications, with a special emphasis on the use of redesigned endonucleases. Conclusion: redesigned endonucleases represent one of the most promising tools for targeted approaches, and the opening of a clinical trial for AIDS patients has recently shown the maturity of these strategies. However, there is still a ‘quest’ for the best reagents, that is the endonucleases providing the best efficacy:toxicity ratio. New advances in protein design have allowed the engineering of new scaffolds, such as meganucleases, and the landscape of existing methods is likely to change over the next few years.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Targeted gene therapy of xeroderma pigmentosum cells using meganuclease and TALEN

Aurélie Dupuy; Julien Valton; Sophie Leduc; Jacques Armier; Roman Galetto; Agnès Gouble; Céline Lebuhotel; Anne Stary; Frédéric Pâques; Philippe Duchateau; Alain Sarasin; Fayza Daboussi

Xeroderma pigmentosum group C (XP-C) is a rare human syndrome characterized by hypersensitivity to UV light and a dramatic predisposition to skin neoplasms. XP-C cells are deficient in the nucleotide excision repair (NER) pathway, a complex process involved in the recognition and removal of DNA lesions. Several XPC mutations have been described, including a founder mutation in North African patients involving the deletion of a TG dinucleotide (ΔTG) located in the middle of exon 9. This deletion leads to the expression of an inactive truncated XPC protein, normally involved in the first step of NER. New approaches used for gene correction are based on the ability of engineered nucleases such as Meganucleases, Zinc-Finger nucleases or TALE nucleases to accurately generate a double strand break at a specific locus and promote correction by homologous recombination through the insertion of an exogenous DNA repair matrix. Here, we describe the targeted correction of the ΔTG mutation in XP-C cells using engineered meganuclease and TALEN™. The methylated status of the XPC locus, known to inhibit both of these nuclease activities, led us to adapt our experimental design to optimize their in vivo efficacies. We show that demethylating treatment as well as the use of TALEN™ insensitive to CpG methylation enable successful correction of the ΔTG mutation. Such genetic correction leads to re-expression of the full-length XPC protein and to the recovery of NER capacity, attested by UV-C resistance of the corrected cells. Overall, we demonstrate that nuclease-based targeted approaches offer reliable and efficient strategies for gene correction.


Molecular therapy. Nucleic acids | 2014

In vitro Inactivation of Latent HSV by Targeted Mutagenesis Using an HSV-specific Homing Endonuclease

Martine Aubert; Nicole M. Boyle; Daniel Stone; Laurence Stensland; Meei Li Huang; Amalia Magaret; Roman Galetto; David J. Rawlings; Andrew M. Scharenberg; Keith R. Jerome

Following acute infection, herpes simplex virus (HSV) establishes latency in sensory neurons, from which it can reactivate and cause recurrent disease. Available antiviral therapies do not affect latent viral genomes; therefore, they do not prevent reactivation following therapy cessation. One possible curative approach involves the introduction of DNA double strand breaks in latent HSV genomes by rare-cutting endonucleases, leading to mutagenesis of essential viral genes. We tested this approach in an in vitro HSV latency model using the engineered homing endonuclease (HE) HSV1m5, which recognizes a sequence in the HSV-1 gene UL19, encoding the virion protein VP5. Coexpression of the 3′-exonuclease Trex2 with HEs increased HE-mediated mutagenesis frequencies up to sixfold. Following HSV1m5/Trex2 delivery with adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors, the target site was mutated in latent HSV genomes with no detectable cell toxicity. Importantly, HSV production by latently infected cells after reactivation was decreased after HSV1m5/Trex2 exposure. Exposure to histone deacetylase inhibitors prior to HSV1m5/Trex2 treatment increased mutagenesis frequencies of latent HSV genomes another two- to fivefold, suggesting that chromatin modification may be a useful adjunct to gene-targeting approaches. These results support the continuing development of HEs and other nucleases (ZFNs, TALENs, CRISPRs) for cure of chronic viral infections.


Stem cell reports | 2015

Generation of a High Number of Healthy Erythroid Cells from Gene-Edited Pyruvate Kinase Deficiency Patient-Specific Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells

Zita Garate; Oscar Quintana-Bustamante; Ana M. Crane; Emmanuel Olivier; Laurent Poirot; Roman Galetto; Penelope Kosinski; Collin Hill; Charles Kung; Xabi Agirre; Israel Orman; Laura Cerrato; Omaira Alberquilla; Fatima Rodriguez-Fornes; Noemi Fusaki; Félix García-Sánchez; Tabita M. Maia; Ribeiro Ml; Julián Sevilla; Felipe Prosper; Shengfang Jin; Joanne C. Mountford; Guillermo Guenechea; Agnès Gouble; Juan A. Bueren; Brian R. Davis; José Segovia

Summary Pyruvate kinase deficiency (PKD) is a rare erythroid metabolic disease caused by mutations in the PKLR gene. Erythrocytes from PKD patients show an energetic imbalance causing chronic non-spherocytic hemolytic anemia, as pyruvate kinase defects impair ATP production in erythrocytes. We generated PKD induced pluripotent stem cells (PKDiPSCs) from peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PB-MNCs) of PKD patients by non-integrative Sendai viral vectors. PKDiPSCs were gene edited to integrate a partial codon-optimized R-type pyruvate kinase cDNA in the second intron of the PKLR gene by TALEN-mediated homologous recombination (HR). Notably, we found allele specificity of HR led by the presence of a single-nucleotide polymorphism. High numbers of erythroid cells derived from gene-edited PKDiPSCs showed correction of the energetic imbalance, providing an approach to correct metabolic erythroid diseases and demonstrating the practicality of this approach to generate the large cell numbers required for comprehensive biochemical and metabolic erythroid analyses.


Methods | 2014

Efficient strategies for TALEN-mediated genome editing in mammalian cell lines

Julien Valton; Jean-Pierre Cabaniols; Roman Galetto; Fabien Delacôte; Marianne Duhamel; Sébastien Paris; Domique Alain Blanchard; Céline Lebuhotel; Séverine Thomas; Sandra Moriceau; Raffy Demirdjian; Gil Letort; Adeline Jacquet; Annabelle Gariboldi; Sandra Rolland; Fayza Daboussi; Alexandre Juillerat; Claudia Bertonati; Aymeric Duclert; Philippe Duchateau

TALEN is one of the most widely used tools in the field of genome editing. It enables gene integration and gene inactivation in a highly efficient and specific fashion. Although very attractive, the apparent simplicity and high success rate of TALEN could be misleading for novices in the field of gene editing. Depending on the application, specific TALEN designs, activity assessments and screening strategies need to be adopted. Here we report different methods to efficiently perform TALEN-mediated gene integration and inactivation in different mammalian cell systems including induced pluripotent stem cells and delineate experimental examples associated with these approaches.


Biotechnology and Bioengineering | 2013

Characterization of three loci for homologous gene targeting and transgene expression

Justin Eyquem; Laurent Poirot; Roman Galetto; Andrew M. Scharenberg; Julianne Smith

Integrative gene transfer is widely used for bioproduction, drug screening, and therapeutic applications but usual viral methods lead to random and multicopy insertions, contribute to unstable transgene expression and can disturb endogenous gene expression. Homologous targeting of an expression cassette using rare‐cutting endonucleases is a potential solution; however the number of studied loci remains limited. Furthermore, the behavior and performance of various types of gene cassettes following gene targeting is poorly defined. Here we have evaluated three loci for gene targeting, including one locus compatible with the proposed Safe Harbor criteria for human translational applications. Using optimized conditions for homologous gene targeting, reporter genes under the control of different promoters were efficiently inserted at each locus in both sense and antisense orientations. Sustainable expression was achieved at all three loci without detectable disturbance of flanking gene expression. However, the promoter, the integration locus and the cassette orientation have a strong impact on transgene expression. Finally, single targeted integrations exhibited greatly improved transgene expression stability versus multicopy or random integration. Taken together, our data suggest a potential set of loci for site‐specific transgene integration, suitable for a variety of biotechnological applications. Biotechnol. Bioeng. 2013; 110: 2225–2235.


Journal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer | 2013

Treatment of B cells malignancies with anti-CD19 CAR+, TCR-, CD52- allogeneic T cells

Cécile Mannioui; Laetitia Lemaire; Laurent Poirot; Agnès Gouble; Sylvain Arnould; Roman Galetto; Julianne Smith; Andrew M. Scharenberg

Encouraging data have emerged from adoptive T-cell therapies in advanced forms of cancer. Anti-tumor immunity is found in tumor infiltrating lymphocytes as well as engineered T cells where exogenous expression of a chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) confers cancer recognition on the cells. Present adoptive immunotherapy methods are restricted to the use of autologous patient T-cells due to the limited persistence of allogeneic T cells and the potential for graft versus host disease (GvHD). The use of autologous patient T cells in cancer immunotherapy is however limited due to the fact that this approach is complex and time consuming. We propose a novel approach to treat B cell malignancies based on the use of genetically modified allogeneic T cells in conjunction with the conditioning regimen alemtuzumab. Allogeneic T cells were engineered to express an anti-CD19 CAR and to no longer express TCRalpha and CD52, responsible for GVHD and the sensitivity to alemtuzumab, respectively. The inactivation of the TCRalpha and CD52 genes in allogeneic T cells was realized by using TALEN TM ,an ovel class of sequence-specific nucleases created by the fusion of transcription activator-like effectors (TALEs) to the catalytic domain of an endonuclease. We have shown that anti-CD19 CAR+ TCR- CD52- allogeneic T cells did not respond to TCR stimulation, were resistant to alemtuzumab treatment and were able to kill target cells expressing CD19 in vitro and in vivo.


Leukemia & Lymphoma | 2018

Selection and characterization of antibody clones are critical for accurate flow cytometry-based monitoring of CD123 in acute myeloid leukemia

Nicole M. Cruz; Mayumi Sugita; Nathan Ewing-Crystal; Linda Lam; Roman Galetto; Agnès Gouble; Julianne Smith; Duane C. Hassane; Gail J. Roboz; Monica L. Guzman

Acute myelogenous leukemia (AML) is a deadly disease characterized by high relapse rates even in patients who initially achieve complete remission. Standard therapy for AML has remained largely unc...

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Andrew M. Scharenberg

Seattle Children's Research Institute

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Julien Valton

University of Copenhagen

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