Publications by authors named "S Schultze-Strasser"

Introduction: Patients with hemophilia A treated with coagulation Factor VIII (FVIII) products are at risk for developing anti-FVIII antibodies. The ABIRISK Consortium aimed to provide knowledge on the formation and detection of anti-drug antibodies against biopharmaceutical products, including FVIII. Accordingly, standardized and validated assays for the detection of binding (total) and neutralizing antibodies are needed.

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Replacement therapy in severe hemophilia A leads to factor VIII (FVIII) inhibitors in 30% of patients. Factor VIII gene (F8) mutation type, a family history of inhibitors, ethnicity and intensity of treatment are established risk factors, and were included in two published prediction tools based on regression models. Recently investigated immune regulatory genes could also play a part in immunogenicity.

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B lymphocytes are key players in humoral immunity, expressing diverse surface immunoglobulin receptors directed against specific antigenic epitopes. The development and profile of distinct subpopulations have gained awareness in the setting of primary immunodeficiency disorders, primary or secondary autoimmunity and as therapeutic targets of specific antibodies in various diseases. The major B cell subpopulations in peripheral blood include naïve (CD19 or CD20IgDCD27), non-switched memory (CD19 or CD20IgDCD27) and switched memory B cells (CD19 or CD20IgDCD27).

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Article Synopsis
  • Chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) is an immune deficiency that affects the body's ability to fight infections, but gene therapy has shown potential as a treatment method in clinical trials.
  • A new self-inactivating gammaretroviral vector (SINfes.gp91s) has been developed to deliver a gene that corrects the underlying issue in the X-linked form of CGD, showing promise in preclinical studies with mice.
  • The new vector demonstrated effective protection against infections with low risks of harmful side effects, such as unwanted cell growth or cancer, indicating it may be a safer alternative for treating CGD.
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Protection against epigenetic silencing is a desirable feature of future gene therapy vectors, in particular for those applications in which transgene expression will not confer growth advantage to gene-transduced cells. The ubiquitous chromatin opening element (UCOE) consisting of the methylation-free CpG island encompassing the dual divergently transcribed promoters of the human HNRPA2B1-CBX3 housekeeping genes (A2UCOE) has been shown to shield constitutive active heterologous promoters from epigenetic modifications and chromosomal position effects. However, it is unclear if this element can be used to improve expression from tissue-specific enhancer/promoters, while maintaining tissue specificity in hematopoietic cells.

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