Cell-Based Therapy for Canavan Disease Using Human iPSC-Derived NPCs and OPCs

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Documents

  • Lizhao Feng
  • Jianfei Chao
  • E. Tian
  • Li Li
  • Peng Ye
  • Mi Zhang
  • Xianwei Chen
  • Qi Cui
  • Guihua Sun
  • Tao Zhou
  • Gerardo Felix
  • Yue Qin
  • Wendong Li
  • Edward David Meza
  • Jeremy Klein
  • Lucy Ghoda
  • Weidong Hu
  • Yonglun Luo
  • Wei Dang
  • David Hsu
  • Joseph Gold
  • Reuben Matalon
  • Yanhong Shi

Canavan disease (CD) is a fatal leukodystrophy caused by mutation of the aspartoacylase (ASPA) gene, which leads to deficiency in ASPA activity, accumulation of the substrate N-acetyl-L-aspartate (NAA), demyelination, and spongy degeneration of the brain. There is neither a cure nor a standard treatment for this disease. In this study, human induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)-based cell therapy is developed for CD. A functional ASPA gene is introduced into patient iPSC-derived neural progenitor cells (iNPCs) or oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (iOPCs) via lentiviral transduction or TALEN-mediated genetic engineering to generate ASPA iNPC or ASPA iOPC. After stereotactic transplantation into a CD (Nur7) mouse model, the engrafted cells are able to rescue major pathological features of CD, including deficient ASPA activity, elevated NAA levels, extensive vacuolation, defective myelination, and motor function deficits, in a robust and sustainable manner. Moreover, the transplanted mice exhibit much prolonged survival. These genetically engineered patient iPSC-derived cellular products are promising cell therapies for CD. This study has the potential to bring effective cell therapies, for the first time, to Canavan disease children who have no treatment options. The approach established in this study can also benefit many other children who have deadly genetic diseases that have no cure.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2002155
JournalAdvanced Science
Volume7
Issue number23
Number of pages19
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

    Research areas

  • Canavan disease, iPSCs, leukodystrophy, neural progenitor cells (NPCs), neurological diseases, oligodendrocyte progenitor cells (OPCs), stem cell therapy

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