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Anti-CD45 PBD-based antibody-drug conjugates are effective targeted conditioning agents for gene therapy and stem cell transplant.

Molecular Therapy 2024 March 28
Stem cell gene therapy and hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (SCT) and stem cell gene therapy require conditioning to ablate the recipient's hematopoietic stem cells (HSC) and create a niche for gene-corrected/donor HSCs. Conventional conditioning agents are non-specific, leading to off-target toxicities, resulting in significant morbidity and mortality. We developed tissue-specific anti-human CD45 antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs), using rat IgG2b anti-human CD45 antibody clones YTH24.5 and YTH54.12, conjugated to cytotoxic pyrrolobenzodiazepine (PBD) dimer payloads with cleavable (SG3249) or non-cleavable (SG3376) linkers. In vitro, these ADCs internalized to lysosomes for drug release, resulting in potent and specific killing of human CD45+ cells. In humanized NSG mice, the ADCs completely ablated human HSCs without toxicity to non-hematopoietic tissues, enabling successful engraftment of gene-modified autologous and allogeneic human HSCs. The ADCs also delayed leukemia onset and improved survival in CD45+ tumor models. These data provide proof-of-concept that conditioning with anti-human CD45-PBD ADCs allows engraftment of donor/gene-corrected HSC, with minimal toxicity to non-hematopoietic tissues. Our anti-CD45-PBDs or similar agents could potentially shift the paradigm in transplantation medicine that intensive chemo/radiotherapy is required for HSC engraftment after gene therapy and allogeneic SCT. Targeted conditioning both improve the safety and minimize late-effects of these procedures which would greatly increase their applicability.

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