Long-term type VII collagen restoration to human epidermolysis bullosa skin tissue

Z Siprashvili, NT Nguyen, MY Bezchinsky… - Human gene …, 2010 - liebertpub.com
Z Siprashvili, NT Nguyen, MY Bezchinsky, MP Marinkovich, AT Lane, PA Khavari
Human gene therapy, 2010liebertpub.com
In spite of advances in the molecular diagnosis of recessive dystrophic epidermolysis
bullosa (RDEB), an inherited blistering disease due to a deficiency of type VII collagen at the
basement membrane zone (BMZ) of stratified epithelium, current therapy is limited to
supportive palliation. Gene delivery has shown promise in short-term experiments; however,
its long-term sustainability through multiple turnover cycles in human tissue has awaited
confirmation. To characterize approaches for long-term genetic correction, retroviral vectors …
Abstract
In spite of advances in the molecular diagnosis of recessive dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa (RDEB), an inherited blistering disease due to a deficiency of type VII collagen at the basement membrane zone (BMZ) of stratified epithelium, current therapy is limited to supportive palliation. Gene delivery has shown promise in short-term experiments; however, its long-term sustainability through multiple turnover cycles in human tissue has awaited confirmation. To characterize approaches for long-term genetic correction, retroviral vectors were constructed containing long terminal repeat-driven full-length and epitope-tagged COL7A1 cDNA and evaluated for durability of type VII collagen expression and function in RDEB skin tissue regenerated on immune-deficient mice. Type VII collagen expression was maintained for 1 year in vivo, or over 12 epidermal turnover cycles, with no abnormalities in skin morphology or self-renewal. Type VII collagen restoration led to correction of RDEB disease features, including reestablishment of anchoring fibrils at the BMZ. This approach confirms durably corrective and noninjurious gene delivery to long-lived epidermal progenitors and provides the foundation for a human clinical trial of ex vivo gene delivery in RDEB.
Mary Ann Liebert