Abstract
Genetic correction of patient-derived embryonic stem (ES) cells is a powerful strategy for the treatment of hemoglobinopathies such as β thalassemia and sickle cell disease. One genetic strategy for the correction of β thalassemia is to replace mutant or deleted β-globin alleles with a wild-type gene by homologous recombination in ES cells. Thalassemic mice that mimic the disorder have been generated by targeted gene deletion of the adult murine β-globin genes (PNAS 92: 9259–9263). We derived ES cells from our β-globin knockout mice and produced genetically identical mutant mice by injecting the ES cells into tetraploid embryos. These cloned β thalassemic mice have a severe microcytic anemia characterized by a marked reduction of the erythrocyte mean corpuscular volume (MCV), hemoglobin level (Hb), and hematocrit (Hct), and a marked increase in reticulocytes and red cell distribution width (RDW) compared to cloned wild-type control animals. In contrast to the normochromic, normocytic erythrocytes of wild-type clones, erythrocytes in peripheral blood smears of β thalassemic mice were hypochromic and exhibit extreme anisopoikilocytosis. A targeting construct containing 8.7 kb of mouse homology flanking a human γ- and β-globin gene cassette and a hygromycin marker gene was electroporated into the β thalassemic ES cells. After selection, DNA from 48 ES cell colonies was analyzed by PCR to identify homologous recombinants. Nineteen colonies (40%) had correctly integrated the human globin genes into the deleted mouse β-globin locus. Correctly targeted cells were injected into tetraploid blastocysts to produce mice that are derived solely from the corrected ES cells. These cloned mice synthesize high levels of human β-globin polypeptide that corrects the α- to β-globin chain imbalance, thereby eliminating the thalassemic erythrocyte morphology. The MCV, Hb, Hct, RDW, and reticulocyte levels in the blood of these mice are normal. These results demonstrate that a severe hemoglobinopathy can be cured after targeted gene replacement of a mutant gene(s) with a wild-type allele by homologous recombination in ES cells.
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