Toward Epidermal Stem Cell-Mediated ex Vivo Gene Therapy of Junctional Epidermolysis Bullosa

2000 
Junctional epidermolysis bullosa (JEB) is a group of severe, inherited skin diseases caused by mutations in the genes encoding laminin 5 or other components of the hemidesmosome. Since human epidermis is a self-renewing tissue, gene therapy of JEB requires the stable integration of the transgene into the genome of the epidermal stem cell. Human epidermal stem cells can indeed be cultivated and stably transduced with replication-defective retroviral vectors, allowing full phenotypic correction of the adhesion properties of JEB keratinocytes. Epidermal stem cells generate cohesive sheets of stratified epithelium suitable for the permanent coverage of massive skin defects, and genetically modified epidermal sheets maintain long-term expression of the transgene after transplantation on immunodeficient animals. Moreover, we have developed a clinical procedure that allows transplantation of cultured epidermal sheets on large body areas under local anesthesia and without cicatricial outcomes. Thus, (1) the possi...
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