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Dive into the research topics where Sebastian Brennig is active.

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Featured researches published by Sebastian Brennig.


Science Translational Medicine | 2014

Pulmonary transplantation of macrophage progenitors as effective and long-lasting therapy for hereditary pulmonary alveolar proteinosis

Christine Happle; Nico Lachmann; Jelena Skuljec; Martin Wetzke; Mania Ackermann; Sebastian Brennig; Adele Mucci; Adan Chari Jirmo; Stephanie Groos; Anja Mirenska; Christina Hennig; Thomas Rodt; Jens P. Bankstahl; Nicolaus Schwerk; Thomas Moritz; Gesine Hansen

Macrophage progenitors are an effective and long-lasting therapy of hereditary pulmonary alveolar proteinosis. Macrophages Treat Rare Lung Disease Innate immune cell transplant into the lung could be an effective treatment for a rare lung disease. Happle et al. report that transplanting macrophage progenitors into lungs of a mouse model of hereditary pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (herPAP) improved lung function for up to 9 months after transplant. herPAP is caused by mutations in the granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor receptor genes, resulting in disturbed alveolar macrophage differentiation and life-threatening respiratory problems. A single transplantation of macrophage progenitors into a mouse model of herPAP resulted in differentiation into functional alveolar macrophages. If these data hold true in humans, this could not only provide a new treatment modality for herPAP but also serve as a proof of principle for other genetic diseases. Hereditary pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (herPAP) is a rare lung disease caused by mutations in the granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) receptor genes, resulting in disturbed alveolar macrophage differentiation, massive alveolar proteinosis, and life-threatening respiratory insufficiency. So far, the only effective treatment for herPAP is repetitive whole-lung lavage, a merely symptomatic and highly invasive procedure. We introduce pulmonary transplantation of macrophage progenitors as effective and long-lasting therapy for herPAP. In a murine disease model, intrapulmonary transplanted macrophage progenitors displayed selective, long-term pulmonary engraftment and differentiation into functional alveolar macrophages. A single transplantation ameliorated the herPAP phenotype for at least 9 months, resulting in significantly reduced alveolar proteinosis, normalized lung densities in chest computed tomography, and improved lung function. A significant and sustained disease resolution was also observed in a second, humanized herPAP model after intrapulmonary transplantation of human macrophage progenitors. The therapeutic effect was mediated by long-lived, lung-resident macrophages, which displayed functional and phenotypical characteristics of primary human alveolar macrophages. Our findings present the concept of organotopic transplantation of macrophage progenitors as an effective and long-lasting therapy of herPAP and may also serve as a proof of principle for other diseases, expanding current stem cell–based strategies toward potent concepts using the transplantation of differentiated cells.


American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine | 2013

Gene Correction of Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Repairs the Cellular Phenotype in Pulmonary Alveolar Proteinosis

Nico Lachmann; Christine Happle; Mania Ackermann; Doreen Lüttge; Martin Wetzke; Sylvia Merkert; Miriam Hetzel; George Kensah; Monica Jara-Avaca; Adele Mucci; Jelena Skuljec; Anna-Maria Dittrich; Nils Pfaff; Sebastian Brennig; Axel Schambach; Doris Steinemann; Gudrun Göhring; Tobias Cantz; Ulrich Martin; Nicolaus Schwerk; Gesine Hansen; Thomas Moritz

RATIONALE Hereditary pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (hPAP) caused by granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) receptor α-chain (CSF2RA) deficiency is a rare, life-threatening lung disease characterized by accumulation of proteins and phospholipids in the alveolar spaces. The disease is caused by a functional insufficiency of alveolar macrophages, which require GM-CSF signaling for terminal differentiation and effective degradation of alveolar proteins and phospholipids. Therapeutic options are extremely limited, and the pathophysiology underlying the defective protein degradation in hPAP alveolar macrophages remains poorly understood. OBJECTIVES To further elucidate the cellular mechanisms underlying hPAP and evaluate novel therapeutic strategies, we here investigated the potential of hPAP patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cell (PAP-iPSCs) derived monocytes and macrophages. METHODS Patient-specific PAP-iPSCs were generated from CD34(+) bone marrow cells of a CSF2RA-deficient patient with PAP. We assessed pluripotency, chromosomal integrity, and genetic correction of established iPSC lines. On hematopoietic differentiation, genetically corrected or noncorrected monocytes and macrophages were investigated in GM-CSF-dependent assays. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS Although monocytes and macrophages differentiated from noncorrected PAP-iPSCs exhibited distinct defects in GM-CSF-dependent functions, such as perturbed CD11b activation, phagocytic activity, and STAT5 phosphorylation after GM-CSF exposure and lack of GM-CSF uptake, these defects were fully repaired on lentiviral gene transfer of a codon-optimized CSF2RA-cDNA. CONCLUSIONS These data establish PAP-iPSC-derived monocytes and macrophages as a valid in vitro disease model of CSF2RA-deficient PAP, and introduce gene-corrected iPSC-derived monocytes and macrophages as a potential autologous cell source for innovative therapeutic strategies. Transplantation of such cells to patients with hPAP could serve as a paradigmatic proof for the potential of iPSC-derived cells in clinical gene therapy.


Stem cell reports | 2015

Large-Scale Hematopoietic Differentiation of Human Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells Provides Granulocytes or Macrophages for Cell Replacement Therapies

Nico Lachmann; Mania Ackermann; Eileen Frenzel; Steffi Liebhaber; Sebastian Brennig; Christine Happle; Dirk Hoffmann; Olga Klimenkova; Doreen Lüttge; Theresa Buchegger; Mark Philipp Kühnel; Axel Schambach; Sabina Janciauskiene; Constanca Figueiredo; Gesine Hansen; Julia Skokowa; Thomas Moritz

Summary Interleukin-3 (IL-3) is capable of supporting the proliferation of a broad range of hematopoietic cell types, whereas granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) and macrophage CSF (M-CSF) represent critical cytokines in myeloid differentiation. When this was investigated in a pluripotent-stem-cell-based hematopoietic differentiation model, IL-3/G-CSF or IL-3/M-CSF exposure resulted in the continuous generation of myeloid cells from an intermediate myeloid-cell-forming complex containing CD34+ clonogenic progenitor cells for more than 2 months. Whereas IL-3/G-CSF directed differentiation toward CD45+CD11b+CD15+CD16+CD66b+ granulocytic cells of various differentiation stages up to a segmented morphology displaying the capacity of cytokine-directed migration, respiratory burst response, and neutrophil-extracellular-trap formation, exposure to IL-3/M-CSF resulted in CD45+CD11b+CD14+CD163+CD68+ monocyte/macrophage-type cells capable of phagocytosis and cytokine secretion. Hence, we show here that myeloid specification of human pluripotent stem cells by IL-3/G-CSF or IL-3/M-CSF allows for prolonged and large-scale production of myeloid cells, and thus is suited for cell-fate and disease-modeling studies as well as gene- and cell-therapy applications.


Gene Therapy | 2013

Efficient in vivo regulation of cytidine deaminase expression in the haematopoietic system using a doxycycline-inducible lentiviral vector system

Nico Lachmann; Sebastian Brennig; Nils Pfaff; H Schermeier; J Dahlmann; R Phaltane; I Gruh; Ute Modlich; Axel Schambach; Christopher Baum; Thomas Moritz

Regulated transgene expression may reduce transgene-specific and genotoxic risks associated with gene therapy. To prove this concept, we have investigated the suitability of doxycycline (Dox)-inducible human cytidine deaminase (hCDD) overexpression from lentiviral vectors to mediate effective myeloprotection while circumventing the lymphotoxicity observed with constitutive CDD activity. Rapid Dox-mediated transgene induction associated with a 6–17-fold increase in drug resistance was observed in 32D and primary murine bone marrow (BM) cells. Moreover, robust Dox-regulated transgene expression in the entire haematopoietic system was demonstrated for primary and secondary recipients of hCDD-transduced R26-M2rtTA transgenic BM cells. Furthermore, mice were significantly protected from myelosuppressive chemotherapy as evidenced by accelerated recovery of granulocytes (1.9±0.6 vs 1.3±0.3, P=0.034) and platelets (883±194 vs 584±160 103 per μl, P=0.011). Minimal transgene expression in the non-induced state and no overt cellular toxicities including lymphotoxicity were detected. Thus, using a relevant murine transplant model our data provide conclusive evidence that drug-resistance transgenes can be expressed in a regulated fashion in the lymphohaematopoietic system, and that Dox-inducible systems may be used to reduce myelotoxic side effect of anticancer chemotherapy or to avoid side effects of high constitutive transgene expression.


Gene Therapy | 2012

MicroRNA-150-regulated vectors allow lymphocyte-sparing transgene expression in hematopoietic gene therapy

Nico Lachmann; J Jagielska; Dirk Heckl; Sebastian Brennig; Nils Pfaff; Tobias Maetzig; Ute Modlich; Tobias Cantz; B Gentner; Axel Schambach; Thomas Moritz

Endogenous microRNA (miRNA) expression can be exploited for cell type-specific transgene expression as the addition of miRNA target sequences to transgenic cDNA allows for transgene downregulation specifically in cells expressing the respective miRNAs. Here, we have investigated the potential of miRNA-150 target sequences to specifically suppress gene expression in lymphocytes and thereby prevent transgene-induced lymphotoxicity. Abundance of miRNA-150 expression specifically in differentiated B and T cells was confirmed by quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR. Mono- and bicistronic lentiviral vectors were used to investigate the effect of miRNA-150 target sequences on transgene expression in the lymphohematopoietic system. After in vitro studies demonstrated effective downregulation of transgene expression in murine B220+ B and CD3+ T cells, the concept was further verified in a murine transplant model. Again, marked suppression of transgene activity was observed in B220+ B and CD4+ or CD8+ T cells whereas expression in CD11b+ myeloid cells, lin− and lin−/Sca1+ progenitors, or lin−/Sca1+/c-kit+ stem cells remained almost unaffected. No toxicity of miRNA-150 targeting in transduced lymphohematopoietic cells was noted. Thus, our results demonstrate the suitability of miRNA-150 targeting to specifically suppress transgene expression in lymphocytes and further support the concept of miRNA targeting for cell type-specific transgene expression in gene therapy approaches.


Stem cell reports | 2016

Murine iPSC-Derived Macrophages as a Tool for Disease Modeling of Hereditary Pulmonary Alveolar Proteinosis due to Csf2rb Deficiency

Adele Mucci; Jessica Kunkiel; Takuji Suzuki; Sebastian Brennig; Silke Glage; Mark Philipp Kühnel; Mania Ackermann; Christine Happle; Alexandra Kuhn; Axel Schambach; Bruce C. Trapnell; Gesine Hansen; Thomas Moritz; Nico Lachmann

Summary Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) represent an innovative source for the standardized in vitro generation of macrophages (Mφ). We here describe a robust and efficient protocol to obtain mature and functional Mφ from healthy as well as disease-specific murine iPSCs. With regard to morphology, surface phenotype, and function, our iPSC-derived Mφ (iPSC-Mφ) closely resemble their counterparts generated in vitro from bone marrow cells. Moreover, when we investigated the feasibility of our differentiation system to serve as a model for rare congenital diseases associated with Mφ malfunction, we were able to faithfully recapitulate the pathognomonic defects in GM-CSF signaling and Mφ function present in hereditary pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (herPAP). Thus, our studies may help to overcome the limitations placed on research into certain rare disease entities by the lack of an adequate supply of disease-specific primary cells, and may aid the development of novel therapeutic approaches for herPAP patients.


Cytotherapy | 2012

In vivo enrichment of cytidine deaminase gene-modified hematopoietic cells by prolonged cytosine-arabinoside application

Sebastian Brennig; Ina Rattmann; Nico Lachmann; Axel Schambach; David A. Williams; Thomas Moritz

BACKGROUND AIMS Drug-resistance genes have been explored as powerful in vivo selection markers in hematopoietic cell gene therapy, and cytidine deaminase (CDD) represents a particularly attractive candidate given the virtual absence of non-hematopoietic side-effects after low/intermediate dose application of the associated drug cytosine-arabinoside (Ara-C). METHODS We investigated the in vivo selection potential of CDD overexpression and prolonged low/intermediate-dose Ara-C application in a murine model. Furthermore, non-transplanted mice were utilized to study Ara-C toxicity in different hematopoietic cell compartments. RESULTS Significant protection of myelo- and thrombopoiesis and up to 6-fold in vivo enrichment of CDD-transduced hematopoietic cells was observed. Enrichment was most robust early after Ara-C application and was correlated with dosage and duration of chemotherapy. Enrichment remained significant for several weeks, indicating selection at the level of a progenitor population. This notion was supported by Ara-C toxicity studies, demonstrating profound hematotoxicity and a marked delay in hematopoietic recovery, specifically in the progenitor/stem cell compartment after low/intermediate-dose Ara-C. CONCLUSIONS These data support the concept of CDD/Ara-C as a clinically applicable in vivo selection system in hematopoietic gene therapy. The data also demonstrate marked differences in hematotoxicity between alternative Ara-C dosing schemes and suggest thorough in vivo toxicity studies to optimize further Ara-C dosing en route to safe and stable enrichment of gene-corrected hematopoiesis.


Biomaterials | 2014

Lentiviral MGMTP140K-mediated in vivo selection employing a ubiquitous chromatin opening element (A2UCOE) linked to a cellular promoter

Ruhi Phaltane; Nico Lachmann; Sebastian Brennig; Mania Ackermann; Ute Modlich; Thomas Moritz

Notwithstanding recent successes, insertional mutagenesis as well as silencing and variegation of transgene expression still represent considerable obstacles to hematopoietic gene therapy. This also applies to O(6)-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT)-mediated myeloprotection, a concept recently proven clinically effective in the context of glioblastoma therapy. To improve on this situation we here evaluate a SIN-lentiviral vector expressing the MGMT(P140K)-cDNA from a combined A2UCOE/PGK-promoter. In a murine in vivo chemoselection model the A2UCOE.PGK.MGMT construct allowed for significant myeloprotection as well as robust and stable selection of transgenic hematopoietic cells. In contrast, only transient enrichment and severe myelotoxicity was observed for a PGK.MGMT control vector. Selection of A2UCOE.PGK.MGMT-transduced myeloid and lymphoid mature and progenitor cells was demonstrated in the peripheral blood, bone marrow, spleen, and thymus. Unlike the PGK and SFFV promoters used as controls, the A2UCOE.PGK promoter allowed for sustained vector copy number-related transgene expression throughout the experiment indicating an increased resistance to silencing, which was further confirmed by CpG methylation studies of the PGK promoter. Thus, our data support a potential role of the A2UCOE.PGK.MGMT-vector in future MGMT-based myeloprotection and chemoselection strategies, and underlines the suitability of the A2UCOE element to stabilize lentiviral transgene expression in hematopoietic gene therapy.


Journal of Experimental & Clinical Cancer Research | 2015

Chemoprotection of murine hematopoietic cells by combined gene transfer of cytidine deaminase (CDD) and multidrug resistance 1 gene (MDR1)

Sebastian Brennig; Nico Lachmann; Theresa Buchegger; Miriam Hetzel; Axel Schambach; Thomas Moritz

BackgroundHematologic toxicity represents a major side effect of cytotoxic chemotherapy frequently preventing adequately dosed chemotherapy application and impeding therapeutic success. Transgenic (over)expression of chemotherapy resistance (CTX-R) genes in hematopoietic stem- and progenitor cells represents a potential strategy to overcome this problem. To apply this concept in the context of acute myeloid leukemia and myelodysplasia, we have investigated the overexpression of the multidrug resistance 1 (MDR1) and the cytidine deaminase (CDD) gene conferring resistance to anthracyclines and cytarabine (Ara-C), the two most important drugs in the treatment of these diseases.MethodsState-of-the-art, third generation, self-inactivating (SIN) lentiviral vectors were utilized to overexpress a human CDD-cDNA and a codon-optimized human MDR1-cDNA corrected for cryptic splice sites from a spleen focus forming virus derived internal promoter. Studies were performed in myeloid 32D cells as well as primary lineage marker negative (lin−) murine bone marrow cells and flow cytometric analysis of suspension cultures and clonogenic analysis of vector transduced cells following cytotoxic drug challenge were utilized as read outs.ResultsEfficient chemoprotection of CDD and MDR1 transduced hematopoietic 32D as well as primary lin− cells was proven in the context of Ara-C and anthracycline application. Both, CTX-R transduced 32D as well as primary hematopoietic cells displayed marked resistance at concentrations 5–20 times the LD50 of non-transduced control cells. Moreover, simultaneous CDD/MDR1 gene transfer resulted in similar protection levels even when combined Ara-C anthracycline treatment was applied. Furthermore, significant enrichment of transduced cells was observed upon cytotoxic drug administration.ConclusionsOur data demonstrate efficient chemoprotection as well as enrichment of transduced cells in hematopoietic cell lines as well as primary murine hematopoietic progenitor cells following Ara-C and/or anthracycline application, arguing for the efficacy as well as feasibility of our approach and warranting further evaluation of this concept.


Gene Therapy | 2015

Tightly regulated 'all-in-one' lentiviral vectors for protection of human hematopoietic cells from anticancer chemotherapy.

Nico Lachmann; Sebastian Brennig; R Hillje; H Schermeier; R Phaltane; J Dahlmann; I Gruh; N Heinz; B Schiedlmeier; Christopher Baum; Thomas Moritz

Successful application of gene therapy strategies may require stringently regulated transgene expression. Along this line, we describe a doxycycline (Dox)-inducible ‘all-in-one’ lentiviral vector design using the pTET-T11 (TII) minimal-promoter and a reverse transactivator protein (rtTA2S-M2) driven by the phosphoglycerate kinase promoter allowing for tight regulation of transgene expression (Lv.TII vectors). Vector design was evaluated in human hematopoietic cells in the context of cytidine deaminase (hCDD)-based myeloprotective gene therapy. Upon Dox administration, a rapid (16–24 h) and dose-dependent (>0.04 μg ml−1 Dox) onset of transgene expression was detected in Lv.TII.CDD gene-modified K562 cells as well as in primary human CD34+ hematopoietic cells. Importantly, in both cell models low background transgene expression was observed in the absence of Dox. Functionality of Dox-inducible hCDD expression was demonstrated by >10-fold increase in cytosine arabinoside (1-β-d-arabinofuranosylcytosine, Ara-C) resistance of Lv.TII.CDD-transduced K562 cells. In addition, Lv.TII.CDD-transduced CD34+-derived myeloid cells were protected from up to 300 nm Ara-C (control affected from 50 nm onwards). These data clearly demonstrate the suitability of our self-inactivating lentiviral vector to induce robust, tightly regulated transgene expression in human hematopoietic cells with minimal background activity and highlight the potential of our construct in myeloprotective gene therapy strategies.

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Adele Mucci

Hannover Medical School

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