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Lentiviral-mediated gene therapy restores B cell tolerance in Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome patients
Francesca Pala, Henner Morbach, Maria Carmina Castiello, Jean-Nicolas Schickel, Samantha Scaramuzza, Nicolas Chamberlain, Barbara Cassani, Salome Glauzy, Neil Romberg, Fabio Candotti, Alessandro Aiuti, Marita Bosticardo, Anna Villa, Eric Meffre
Francesca Pala, Henner Morbach, Maria Carmina Castiello, Jean-Nicolas Schickel, Samantha Scaramuzza, Nicolas Chamberlain, Barbara Cassani, Salome Glauzy, Neil Romberg, Fabio Candotti, Alessandro Aiuti, Marita Bosticardo, Anna Villa, Eric Meffre
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Research Article Immunology

Lentiviral-mediated gene therapy restores B cell tolerance in Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome patients

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Abstract

Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome (WAS) is an X-linked immunodeficiency characterized by microthrombocytopenia, eczema, and high susceptibility to developing tumors and autoimmunity. Recent evidence suggests that B cells may be key players in the pathogenesis of autoimmunity in WAS. Here, we assessed whether WAS protein deficiency (WASp deficiency) affects the establishment of B cell tolerance by testing the reactivity of recombinant antibodies isolated from single B cells from 4 WAS patients before and after gene therapy (GT). We found that pre-GT WASp-deficient B cells were hyperreactive to B cell receptor stimulation (BCR stimulation). This hyperreactivity correlated with decreased frequency of autoreactive new emigrant/transitional B cells exiting the BM, indicating that the BCR signaling threshold plays a major role in the regulation of central B cell tolerance. In contrast, mature naive B cells from WAS patients were enriched in self-reactive clones, revealing that peripheral B cell tolerance checkpoint dysfunction is associated with impaired suppressive function of WAS regulatory T cells. The introduction of functional WASp by GT corrected the alterations of both central and peripheral B cell tolerance checkpoints. We conclude that WASp plays an important role in the establishment and maintenance of B cell tolerance in humans and that restoration of WASp by GT is able to restore B cell tolerance in WAS patients.

Authors

Francesca Pala, Henner Morbach, Maria Carmina Castiello, Jean-Nicolas Schickel, Samantha Scaramuzza, Nicolas Chamberlain, Barbara Cassani, Salome Glauzy, Neil Romberg, Fabio Candotti, Alessandro Aiuti, Marita Bosticardo, Anna Villa, Eric Meffre

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Figure 4

WASp-deficient Tregs display reduced suppressive capacity.

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WASp-deficient Tregs display reduced suppressive capacity.
(A) Represent...
(A) Representative flow cytometry dot plots showing the analysis of CD25 and FOXP3 expression with gating on CD4+ cells (left panel) or CD45RO and Ki67 with gating on CD4+CD25+CD127loFOXP3+ Treg (middle panel) or CD4+CD25–CD127+FOXP3– non-Treg (right panel) from a HD control (upper row) and a WAS patient (bottom row). (B) Percentages of CD3+CD4+CD25+CD127loFOXP3+ Tregs among total CD4+ cells (left) and Ki67+ cells among CD45RO+ Tregs (middle) or among CD45RO+ non-Tregs of 45 HDs (open diamonds) and 12 WAS patients (filled diamonds). (C and D) Representative histograms of Treg-mediated suppression of autologous and heterologous CFSE-labeled Tresp from a WAS patient and HD control. Dashed lines display nonstimulated Tresp cells (C). The autologous and heterologous suppressive activities of Tregs from HD controls and WAS patients are summarized in D. (B and D) Differences were analyzed for statistical significance using Mann-Whitney test.

Copyright © 2025 American Society for Clinical Investigation
ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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