Q1 · MEDICINE
Article
Author: Aiuti, Alessandro ; Andolfi, Grazia ; Rigamonti, Chiara ; Scala, Serena ; Rocchi, Martina ; Sanvito, Francesca ; Colantuoni, Mariasilvia ; Gregori, Silvia ; Basso-Ricci, Luca ; Pettinato, Emanuela ; Kajaste-Rudnitski, Anna ; Naldini, Luigi ; Finardi, Annamaria ; Jofra Hernandez, Raisa ; Magnani, Laura ; Soldi, Monica ; Romeo, Valentina ; Mortellaro, Alessandra ; Muzio, Luca ; Hoffman, Hal M ; Sergi Sergi, Lucia
Dysregulation of the interleukin-1 (IL-1) pathway leads to immune diseases that can result in chronic tissue and organ inflammation. Although IL-1 blockade has shown promise in ameliorating these symptoms and improving patients’ quality of life, there is an urgent need for more effective, long-lasting treatments. We developed a lentivirus (LV)–mediated gene transfer strategy using transplanted autologous hematopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPCs) as a source of IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1RA) for systemic delivery to tissues and organs. Transplantation of mouse and human HSPCs transduced with an IL-1RA–encoding LV ensured stable IL-1RA production while maintaining the clonogenic and differentiation capacities of HSPCs in vivo. We examined the efficacy of cell-mediated IL-1RA delivery in three models of IL-1–dependent inflammation, for which treatment hindered neutrophil recruitment in an inducible model of gout, prevented systemic and multi-tissue inflammation in a genetic model of cryopyrin-associated periodic syndromes, and reduced disease severity in an experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis model of multiple sclerosis. Our findings demonstrate HSPC-mediated IL-1RA delivery as a potential therapeutic modality that can be exploited to suppress tissue and organ inflammation in diverse immune-related diseases involving IL-1–driven inflammation.