The three-body problem of therapy with induced pluripotent stem cells

May 2015

Regenerative medicine has a three-body problem: alignment of the dynamics of the genome, stem cell and patient. Focusing on the rare inherited fragile skin disorder epidermolysis bullosa, three recent innovative studies have used induced pluripotent stem cells and gene correction, revertant mosaicism or genome editing to advance the prospects of better cell-based therapeutics to restore skin structure and function for epidermolysis bullosa and potentially other inherited diseases.

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The three-body problem of therapy with induced pluripotent stem cells

Tolar and McGrath Genome Medicine (2015) 7:15 DOI 10.1186/s13073-015-0141-7 RESEARCH HIGHLIGHT Open Access The three-body problem of therapy with induced pluripotent stem cells Jakub Tolar1* and John A McGrath2 Abstract Regenerative medicine has a three-body problem: alignment of the dynamics of the genome, stem cell and patient. Focusing on the rare inherited fragile skin disorder epidermolysis bullosa, three recent innovative studies have used induced pluripotent stem cells and gene correction, revertant mosaicism or genome editing to advance the prospects of better cell-based therapeutics to restore skin structure and function for epidermolysis bullosa and potentially other inherited diseases. One of the dominant ambitions of medicine today is for genes and cells to be used as medications. However, cells and genes do not operate independently of their environment, but always in the context of the recipient. The default of cellular transplantation is rejection, the innate and adaptive immune system protecting the host body. We can apply the key concepts of transplantation biology, tested over 50 years of bone marrow transplants, to the development of graftable induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-derived cells and tissues. Three recent publications [1-3] extend iPSC-based therapy initiatives in the field of regenerative dermatology and exemplify a larger challenge for any clinically meaningful medical approach: the need to simultaneously engineer genes, capture cellular stemness and graft gene-corrected cells into individuals with an inherited skin disease. A shipwreck, not a butterfly In the severe forms of epidermolysis bullosa (EB), a group of skin fragility disorders with profound implications for physical and mental health, even slight friction causes the layers of mucocutaneous membranes to slide * Correspondence: 1 Stem Cell Institute and Division of Blood and Marrow Transplantation, Department of Pediatrics, University of Minnesota, 420 Delaware St SE, MMC 366, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA Full list of author information is available at the end of the article apart and results in painful wounds that can resemble severe burns. The most overwhelming of these skin conditions are recessive dystrophic EB (RDEB) and junctional EB (JEB), autosomal recessive disorders in which the genes encoding major skin adhesion proteins do not function properly, leading to severely diminished or absent gene expression. Patients with these disorders are often called ‘butterfly children’ because of their delicate and easily damaged skin, and the fact that many do not survive into adulthood. This disorder has an impact far beyond the skin, as these individuals experience severe skin blistering, corneal erosions, and mucosal wounds that can result in malnutrition. EB is a horrible and frequently fatal disease that wrecks any attempt at a normal life, both for the sufferer and for the family. Despite the intense efforts of medical scientists around the globe, there is currently no cure. However, as the work from three teams discussed herein demonstrates [1-3], scientists are working with determination and creativity on a cure. Furry test tubes Murine models have proven tremendously useful in studying the basic biology of human inherited skin diseases and in preclinical modeling of potential therapeutic interventions. For RDEB, at least two murine models exist, one with no expression of basement membrane type VII collagen (C7) [4], and one with approximately 10% wild-type expression of C7 [5]. The groups of Penninger and Bruckner-Tuderman [1] used the latter model, and reprogrammed tail skin fibroblasts into iPSCs that were used for therapy. To demonstrate the feasibility of this iPSC-based therapy, mutant cells were corrected, restoring the function of Col7a1. These corrected iPSCs were then differentiated back into fibroblasts, and injected intradermally into mutant mice. Expression of C7 increased over the first 8 weeks and then declined to the baseline levels expected in this © 2015 Tolar and McGrath; licensee BioMed Central. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated. Tolar and McGrath Genome Medicine (2015) 7:15 model of RDEB (corresponding with the decline of donor cells to undetectable numbers over the same period). Importantly, no obvious abnormal inflammatory response, fibrosis or tumor formation (such as teratoma derived from an errant iPSC, or squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) associated with the pathophysiology of RDEB) was observed over the 18 weeks after therapy. To demonstrate functionality of the new C7, the authors tested the skin stability and observed it increased after injection of corrected fibroblasts, but not after administration of uncorrected mutant cells. This is a key observation, since previous work indicated that injection of cells or just a cell-free solution can also increase expression of mutant C7 at the epidermal-dermal junction in human RDEB subjects with hypomorphic COL7A1 mutations [6] and improve wound healing, presumably in part by changing a chronic wound into an acute one. Rebooted skin cells Equally important to advances in the clinical application of iPSC therapy has been reprogramming keratinocytes, the major cell type expressing C7 in normal skin, with genetic reversion of the disease-causing mutations. Revertant mosaicism occurs in some RDEB patients, providing a source of naturally gene-corrected skin cells. Researchers have previously generated personalized iPSCs and iPSC-derived skin cells from individuals with JEB [7], RDEB [8] and mosaic RDEB [9]. Now Christiano and colleagues [2] have used keratinocytes with a naturally occurring reversion in the COL17A1 gene (encoding type XVII collagen) from a healthy appearing skin patch of an individual with JEB, reprogrammed them into iPSCs, and differentiated them into keratinocytes with the capacity to form skin-like organoids. These advances are elegant and promising tools in future EB therapies, even though three key challenges remain: the iPSCs were generated with retroviral-mediated transgenesis, which is unlikely to be acceptable in clinical trials; the skin-like equivalents are not true skin grafts; and the graftable keratinocytes have not yet been tested in a murine model of EB. Have a nice DNA The brilliant approach represented by the work of Oro and colleagues [3] is aimed at helping the majority of people with EB who do not have clinically identifiable mosaic cells (or in whom the gene reversion leads to only partial restoration of collagen expression). They propose gen (...truncated)


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Jakub Tolar, John A McGrath. The three-body problem of therapy with induced pluripotent stem cells, 2015, pp. 15, Volume 7, Issue 1, DOI: 10.1186/s13073-015-0141-7