Gene therapy - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 51
About This Presentation
Title:

Gene therapy

Description:

... on to progeny cells in the course of normal cell division, which may provide ... HSV/TK converts the prodrug ganciclovir into toxic metabolites, that inhibit the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:1058
Avg rating:5.0/5.0
Slides: 52
Provided by: biolo101
Category:
Tags: courses | gene | therapy

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Gene therapy


1
Gene therapy
  • Any procedure to treat or alleviate disease which
    involves genetically modifying the cells of the
    patient
  • can be used to treat
  • infectious diseases
  • cancers
  • inherited disorders
  • immune system disorders
  • Scientific hurdles in gene therapy
  • concept of vehicles called vectors (gene
    carriers) to deliver therapeutic genes to the
    patients' cells
  • Once the gene is in the cell, it needs to operate
    correctly
  • Patients' bodies may reject treatments
  • need to regulate gene expression.

2
Gene therapy approaches
  • Classical
  • Deliver genes too appropriate target cells with
    aim of obtaining optimal expression
  • Once inside target cells, genes may
  • Produce a product the patient lacks (loss of
    function mutations)
  • Kill diseased cells directly (cancer cells)
  • Activate immune system to kill cells
  • Non-classical
  • Inhibit expression of genes associated with
    pathologies (gain-of-function mutations, for
    example)
  • Correct a genetic defect and restore normal gene
    expression (targeted gene replacement or
    correction)

3
Somatic versus germline therapy
  • Somatic
  • Genetic defect is only corrected in somatic ells
    of affected individual
  • Any genetic changes are restricted to treated
    person
  • Few ethical concerns
  • Germline
  • Genetic modifications made to the gamete,
    fertilized egg or embryo
  • Any stable changes will be passed on to all
    future generations
  • Used to create transgenic mice
  • Research into such techniques is currently
    prohibited in most countries
  • Not the same as cloning!

4
in vivo versus ex vivo therapy
5
Different tissues are targeted
  • Ex vivo
  • Suitable when affected tissues can be removed,
    altered genetically and reintroduced
  • Works best for blood cells or skin cells
  • Used to treat ADA deficiency
  • In vivo
  • Cloned genes are transferred directly into
    tissues
  • When cells cannot be cultured in vitro (brain
    cells, lung epithelia)

6
Gene addition versus replacement
  • Ideally gene therapy would aim to replace
    defective genes with normal copies
  • Involves homologous recombination and selection
    to detect small percentage of cells that have
    made change
  • Would not be useful for in vivo therapy
  • Germline therapy would require precise gene
    replacement- major technological hurdle
  • New techniques are being developed for gene
    replacement using recombination or gene
    correction
  • Gene addition most common technique in somatic
    therapy
  • Transgene works along side of mutated gene
  • Cannot correct a dominant mutation

7
gene addition
  • Gene addition seeks to compensate for a defective
    gene (red) by providing cells with a corrective
    gene (green). Genes can be injected directly into
    cells, or they can be coaxed in by chemical or
    electrical means. Most delivery systems deposit
    corrective genes in the cells nucleus, where it
    remains only transiently. Other methods integrate
    genes into the chromosomes. Integrated genes can
    be passed on to progeny cells in the course of
    normal cell division, which may provide long-term
    therapeutic benefits.

8
Vehicles/vectors for gene transfer
  • Various techniques using viral vectors have been
    developed
  • They each have advantages and disadvantages based
    on the list below
  • Factors to consider
  • Efficiency of delivery to target cell
  • Specificity of delivery
  • Expression of introduced gene in target cell
  • Dividing versus non-dividing
  • Size of DNA that can be carried
  • Stability of gene in target cell
  • Induction of host immune response?

9
Retroviral vectors
  • RNA viruses that encode reverse transcriptase
  • Infect cells, viral RNA genome ? DNA, integrates
    into genome into a single site on host chromosome
  • Very efficient at transferring DNA and integrated
    DNA is very stable
  • Richard Mulligan and Constance Cepko, at MIT,
    made the important technological leap that
    initiated the modern era of gene therapy
  • members of the retrovirus family could be
    engineered to carry foreign genes into mammalian
    cells and splice them into the hosts
    chromosomes.

10
Retroviruses for gene therapy
  • Murine leukemia virus (MLV)
  • Integration requires LTRs
  • Pol reverse transcriptase ? required for
    packaging of virus Env viral envelope protein
    Gag viral core protein
  • virus needs to be unable to replicate

11
Control of gene expression in MLV
  • When constructing their retroviral vectors,
    Mulligan and colleagues opted to use promoters
    native to the virus, rather than the corrective
    genes own promoter. In laboratory petri dishes,
    these vectors sometimes worked quite well, but
    not always.
  • In some cases, the therapeutic genes entered the
    cells as expected but were expressed at
    unpredictably low levels. Low levels of
    expression continue to dog gene-therapy efforts,
    and improving expression levels remains a major
    focus of research. Recent vectors include
    portions of the genes own promoter. This has the
    added benefit that the therapeutic gene is
    expressed as naturally as possible -- only during
    the times when its product is needed.

12
Controlling retroviral vectors
  • Certain promoters are sensitive to tetracycline
    and are activated when the drug is present. A
    vector was recently constructed by Herman Bujold
    and colleagues at the University of Heidelberg
    that pairs a tetracycline-sensitive promoter with
    a corrective test gene. The test gene would be
    activated only if the patient ingests
    tetracycline.
  • More recently, retroviral vectors have been
    developed that can be infused directly into an
    organ, such as the liver, or placed into the lung
    by inhalation.

13
Drawbacks to retroviral gene therapy
  • Retroviruses only infect continually
    proliferating cells
  • certain blood cells (not stem cells)
  • Cells lining gastrointestinal tract
  • Other cell types divide but discontinuously, or
    never divide (mature neurons)
  • Can be a useful way to target cancer cells
  • Size of DNA is limited (7 kb)
  • Does not specifically target one cell type
  • New techniques aimed at Env protein
  • Fuse a protein hormone to Env so virus is
    targeted to cells expressing that hormone
    receptor
  • Integrates at random sites in the genome- may
    cause insertional mutagenesis
  • If integration occurs near a proto-oncogene, may
    cause activation

14
Adenoviral vectors
  • Double-stranded DNA viruses that infect the
    non-dividing cells of the respiratory and
    gastrointestinal tracts
  • Once inside cells, replicate as episomes (do not
    integrate)
  • To disable the virus, the E1 gene is replaced
    with foreign DNA(6 kb)
  • The bulk of the early work on adenoviral gene
    therapy was conducted by Ronald Crystal at
    Cornell Medical School and James Wilson at the
    University of Pennsylvania.
  • Major drawbacks
  • The adenoviral vectors have to be repeatedly
    administered in order to maintain a steady
    therapeutic dose.
  • some of the vectors cause a strong inflammatory
    response at the high levels required to achieve
    therapeutic doses
  • have been used in human trials to correct
    mutations in the CFTR gene. The success of these
    trials, however, has been quite low. For one
    thing, the hosts immune system registers the
    adenoviral vector as foreign and eliminates it
    from the system.

15
Adeno-associated virus (AAV)
  • Adeno-associated virus (AAV) are non-pathogenic
    human parvoviruses
  • Dependant on a helper virus, usually adenovirus,
    to proliferate
  • Infects a wide range of cells, including lung and
    muscle cells, and integrates its genes at a
    specific site within the hosts chromosome 19.
  • Can infect non-dividing cells and does not elicit
    an immune response -- both of which are important
    advantages over retroviral and adenoviral
    vectors.
  • Integration into the host genome allows prolonged
    transgene expression.
  • Gene transfer into vascular epithelial cells,
    striated muscle hepatic cells has been
    reported, with prolonged expression when the
    transgene is not derived from a different
    species.
  • There has been no attempt to target particular
    cell types other than by localised vector
    delivery.
  • Pioneered by three investigators Kenneth Berns
    and Nicholas Muzyczka at the University of
    Florida and R. Jude Samulski at the University of
    North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

16
AAV
  • The wild type genome is a single stranded DNA
    molecule, consisting of two genes rep, coding
    for proteins which control viral replication,
    structural gene expression integration into the
    host genome, cap, which codes for capsid
    structural proteins. At either end of the genome
    is a 145 bp terminal repeat (TR), containing a
    promoter
  • a cDNA and promoter can be inserted to replace
    rep and cap, but must be smaller than 4.7 kb

17
AAV and protein delivery
  • Used two AAVs
  • Loaded one with the gene for erythropoietin, or
    Epo, a recombinant protein that stimulates red
    blood cell production and is used to treat
    anemias
  • Loaded the other with the genes for a
    transcription factor complex able to regulate
    Epo.
  • T particular transcription factor can be switched
    on by a small-molecule drug called rapamycin,
    which can be taken orally.
  • Significantly, the amount of rapamycin
    administered controlled the level of Epo produced
    by cells exposed to the AAV vectors.
  • giving more rapamycin stimulated a proportionate
    rise in production of Epo, resulting in higher
    numbers of red blood cells in the bloodstream.
    Conversely, stopping administration of rapamycin
    shut down production of Epo. The effects of the
    treatment were tracked for six months in mice and
    three months in monkeys.
  • Epo was chosen as a demonstration gene for the
    new drug delivery system because it is a
    therapeutically significant drug that currently
    must be given by injection several times a week
    and because its action can easily be measured
    through red blood cell counts.

18
Herpesvirus
  • Tropic for the central nervous system
  • Can establish lifelong latent infections in
    neurons
  • Have large insert size capacity (20 kb)
  • Non-integrating
  • Long-term expression of gene is impossible
  • Goal is to use these for treatment of
    neurological diseases such as Parkinson's and for
    treating CNS tumours
  • Currently not being actively used

19
Comparison of vectors
20
Non-viral DNA transfer
  • Non-viral methods of DNA transfer
  • require only a small number of proteins
  • have a virtually infinite capacity
  • have no infectious or mutagenic capability
  • large scale production is possible using
    pharmaceutical techniques.
  • Methods of non-viral DNA transfer
  • Liposomes and lipoplexes
  • naked DNA
  • Receptor-mediated endocytosis

21
Liposomes and lipoplexes
  • Spherical vesicles composed of synthetic lipid
    bilayers which mimic the structure of biological
    membranes

22
Liposomes
  • In vitro up to 90 of certain cell lines may be
    transfected.
  • By including a small amount of an anionic lipid
    in an otherwise cationic liposome the DNA can be
    incorporated into the internal surface of the
    liposome, thus protecting it from enzymatic
    degradation.
  • The inclusion of a DNA-binding protein enhances
    transcription by bringing the plasmid into the
    nucleus.
  • Further proposed improvements include
    incorporating Epstein-Barr genes in the plasmid
    to maintain the plasmid as an episomal element.
  • No limit to DNA size
  • Efficiency of transfer is low and DNA does not
    integrate
  • Expression of inserted genes is transient

23
Naked DNA
  • Was discovered by accident when naked DNA was
    used as a negative control in liposome expts
  • Naked DNA (in the form of a plasmid) can be
    directly injected into muscle cells or attached
    to gold particles that are bombarded into the
    tissue (gene guns)
  • Injection has been used to target muscle cells in
    mice with mdx defect, model for Duchenne
  • DNA believed to enter the cell through small
    lesions in cell membrane
  • Not very efficient, but can result in prolonged
    low level expression in vivo if stably
    integrated.
  • could be useful in cells that dont deivide
    frequently, like muscle cells

24
Receptor-mediated endocytosis
  • DNA coupled to a targeting molecule that can bind
    to a specific cell surface receptor
  • Covalent linkage of polylysine to receptor (
    charge)
  • Bind DNA (- charge)
  • Transferrin receptor expressed in many cell
    types, enriched in proliferating cells and blood
    cells
  • After endosome formation, some DNA can migrate to
    nucleus, but most is degraded- not integrated
  • Can also be used with cell-specific receptors
    like asialoglycoprotein receptors, found on
    surface of hepatocytes and are used for clearing
    ASGP from serum
  • Complexes would be infused into liver and taken
    up by specific cells

25
Targeted inhibition of gene expression
  • Selectively inhibit the expression of a specific
    gene in vivo
  • Well suited to cancer and infectious disease
  • May offer hope of treating dominantly inherited
    diseases, to specifically inhibit expression of
    mutant allele
  • Most obvious desire
  • Targeted recombination for gene replacement
  • Still very ineffcicient
  • Various other approaches
  • Targeted inhibition of expression at DNA level
  • Targeted inhibition of expression at RNA level
  • Targeted inhibition of expression at protein
    level
  • One more approach- in vivo DNA repair

26
Targeted inhibition of expression at DNA level
  • DNA can form a triple helix if bound by a
    specific oligonucleotide
  • Such binding will prevent transcription of the
    targeted gene

27
Targeted inhibition of expression at RNA level
  • Anti-sense therapeutics to block expression of
    disease-causing genes
  • Binding of gene-specific oligodeoxynucleotides
    (instead of oligoribo-) or anti-sense transcripts
    to RNA
  • May involve a catalytically active RNA (ribozyme)
    that binds to RNA and cleaves it, rendering it
    inactive
  • Antisense oligodeoxynucleotides (ODN) can be
    synthesized simply and transferred into cells
    with liposomes
  • Will not bind to double stranded DNA, specific
    for RNA
  • ODN-RNA hybrids sensitive to attack from RNAseH,
    causes actual destruction of mRNA

28
Targeted inhibition of expression at protein level
  • Intracellular antibodies (intrabodies)
  • Can be directed to a specific cell compartment
    where they can bind to and inactivate
    disease-causing molecules
  • Oligonucleotide aptamers
  • Oligonucleotides that can bind to specific
    protein sequences
  • Identify by screening thousands of oligos for
    binding
  • Idea is to transfer large amounts of oligos into
    specific cell to block protein function
  • No therapeutic function found yet
  • Mutant proteins
  • Proteins often form multimeric complexes
  • Design poison proteins to inactivate proteins
    needed for the life cycle of a pathogen, like AIDS

29
In vivo correction of a mutation
  • To treat certain disorders that are not easily
    treated by other means
  • Uses synthetic chimeric DNA/RNA molecules to
    induce site-directed repair in vivo
  • way to repair damaged genes, rather than
    replacing them.
  • Takes advantage of cells DNA repair mechanism
  • place into the cell a small hybrid RNA-DNA
    molecule called a chimeric oligomer that pairs
    with the defective gene in the region of the
    error.
  • Repair enzymes use the oligomer as a template to
    guide the correction. The oligomer binds snugly
    with the defective gene except in the region of
    the error, where the mismatch causes a bulge.
  • Repair enzymes detect this bulge and replace the
    erroneous nucleotides. In this example the
    guanine (G)-cytosine (C) pair is incorrect. The
    oligomer provides the template indicating that an
    adenine (A)-thy mine (T) pair should be inserted
    in that spot. The repair enzymes follow the
    instructions in the template and correct the gene
    accordingly. Corrections made this way endure for
    generations of cell divisions.

30
Gene correction
  • successfully corrected seven chromosomal targets
    with this approach.
  • feasibility of using gene repair to correct the
    sickle-cell mutation in vitro
  • correction is maintained through successive
    generations of cell division, suggesting that
    gene repair may have long-term benefits.

31
Gene therapy trials underway
32
Gene therapy to treat cancer
  • gene therapy has emerged as a potential
    alternative to the existing treatments, and its
    potential is such that protocols for the
    treatment of cancer now account for over 80 of
    the gene therapy clinical trials .
  • General approaches
  • Stimulate natural killing of cancer cells
    (enhance immunogenicity)
  • Artificial killing of cancer cells (toxin)
  • Inhibit expression of oncogenes (DNA, RNA,
    protein levels)
  • Gene addition of tumour suppressors

33
Immunotherapy
  • The aim of immunopotentiation is to enhance the
    response of the immune system to cancers, thereby
    leading to their destruction.
  • Passive immunotherapy aims to increase the
    pre-existing immune response to the cancer whilst
    active immunotherapy initiates an immune response
    against an unrecognized or poorly antigenic
    tumour.
  • Passive immunotherapy usually involves harvesting
    tumour infiltrating lymphocytes treating them
    to express increased cytokines e.g. IL-2
    TNF-alpha. The cell population is then expanded
    in vitro returned to the patient.
  • Tumour cells are used for active immunotherapy,
    genetically modifying them to increase expression
    of antigen presenting molecules/co-stimulatory
    molecules (e.g. B7), local concentrations of
    cytokines (e.g. IL-2) or tumour antigens (erbB2
    oncoprotein).

34
Immunopotentiation
  • The cells are then irradiated prior to being
    returned to the patient, preventing the
    reintroduction of replication competent tumour
    cells. These approaches have been termed cancer
    vaccines.
  • Increasing the immunogenicity of tumours may then
    lead to an anti-tumour response. Because immunity
    is a systemic reaction, this immune reaction
    could potentially eliminate all the tumour cells
    in the body, including sites of metastatic
    deposit.

35
Immune approaches
36
Gene-Directed Enzyme Pro-drug Therapy
  • Introduction of genes that encode enzymes capable
    of converting pro-drugs to cytotoxic drugs is the
    basis of the GDEPT approach to cancer gene
    therapy.
  • A relatively harmless pro-drug can be
    administered to a patient following the
    transfection of some tumour cells with genes
    encoding enzymes that will activate the pro-drug
    in situ to form a cytotoxic drug that will kill
    the tumour cell.
  • This approach may be considered as using gene
    therapy to improve upon conventional
    chemotherapy. The local expression of an
    activating enzyme ensures that the peripheral
    toxicity often associated with chemotherapy is
    reduced. The use of a relatively harmless
    pro-drug ensures that high doses can be
    administered to the patient, resulting in high
    concentrations of the cytotoxic drug being
    produced in vicinity of the tumour.
  • Following the death of the tumour cell, the
    cytotoxic drug may be able diffuse into
    neighbouring cells and kill them, a phenomenon
    known as the bystander effect. The bystander
    effect ensures that it is not necessary to
    transfect all of the cells in the tumour, indeed
    it has been shown that 100 cell death can be
    achieved in vitro following transfection of only
    10 of the cells.

37
Suicide Gene Therapy or molecular chemotherapy
  • E. coli cytosine deaminase (CD) gene 5-
    fluorocytosine (5-FC).
  • CD converts 5-FC to 5- FU, a chemotherapeutic
    agent.
  • This combination produces a bystander effect and
    has been demonstrated to have some success in
    animals with hepatic metastasis of
    gastro-intestinal tumors.
  • Delivery of CD to specific sites and the use of
    tissue specific promotors are a focus of work
    with this strategy.
  • Herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase gene
    (HSV-tk) ganciclovir (GCV).
  • HSV/TK converts the prodrug ganciclovir into
    toxic metabolites, that inhibit the synthesis of
    DNA.
  • Also causes a bystander effect. This strategy has
    been looked at for treatment of localized brain
    tumors, liver metastases.
  • Unpredictability of bystander effect and
    difficulties in transduction have kept cure rates
    low.
  • The use of tissue-specific vectors may improve
    the efficacy of the approach in time.

38
Tumour suppressor gene therapy
  • Goals of tumor suppressor gene therapy
  • cell death
  • changes in
  • growth of the cell
  • behavior of the cell
  • invasiveness of the cell
  • metastatic ability of the cell.
  • Because p53 is the most common gene mutated in
    cancer and influences transcription, cell cycle
    movement, apoptosis, and angiogenesis, it is a
    prime target for gene replacement.
  • In model systems, transduction of cancer cells
    with p53 has been demonstrated to
  • inhibit growth,
  • inhibit angiogenesis, and
  • induce apoptosis.
  • Early clinical trials using a p53 retrovirus have
    also been encouraging.

39
Prostate cancer therapy and p53
  • Hypothesis effective transfer of the p53 gene
    would result in cancer cell death, ultimately
    resulting in reduction of tumor size.
  • A total of 26 men with advanced localized
    prostate cancer who were candidates for a
    prostatectomy participated in the Houston study.
    Each man received an injection containing a
    synthetic form of the p53 gene, or an
    "adenoviral-p53 gene". The injection went
    directly into the prostate tumor.
  • The size of the tumor was monitored with
    ultrasound over a six-week period. Subsequently,
    all of the men received a prostatectomy, after
    which the size of the prostate tumor was
    measured. Results of the study showed that seven
    of the men, or 27 percent of the study
    participants, experienced at least a 25-percent
    reduction in the size of the tumor. In addition
    to reduction in tumor size, the investigators saw
    increased cell death and intracellular transfer
    of the p53 protein, evidence of the potential
    efficacy of the gene therapy.

40
Gene therapy for inherited disorders
41
Beginnings of gene therapy trials for heritable
diseases
  • The first human trials of gene therapy began in
    1990 using a strategy of ex vivo gene therapy.
  • The first therapeutic trials utilizing the ex
    vivo approach attempted to treat two genetic
    disorders, including children with an inherited
    form of immune deficiency adenosine deaminase
    deficiency with severe combined immuno-deficiency
    (ADA-SCID), as well as children and adults with
    extremely high levels of serum cholesterol.
  • The first model for in vivo gene therapy was
    based on an attenuated version of the adenovirus
    in the treatment of cystic fibrosis. Adenoviruses
    have a natural tropism for lungs in that they are
    associated with respiratory diseases.

42
ADA trial
  • 5-6 mo. after beginning the therapy the T cell
    counts in patient 1 rapidly increased until they
    reached the normal range where they have
    remained. The levels of the ADA enzyme were also
    found to have increased significantly.
  • Patient 2 also showed an increase in the number
    of T cells, but no significant increase in ADA
    levels could be detected.

43
2002- success in treating SCID
  • 18 month old boy in England
  • bone marrow cells removed and mixed with a mouse
    retrovirus carrying normal version of defective
    gene
  • Cells later transfused back into patient
  • Now he has a normal immune system
  • A second child that started therapy later is
    doing even better

44
Cystic fibrosis gene therapy
  • primary defect is in lungs- no way too culture-
    must use in vivo therapy- aerosol to deliver
    vector
  • First trial (1993) used adenovirus complications
    with dosage
  • More recent trials- liposome-mediated transfer of
    the gene encoding CFTR into nasal airway
    epithelial cells.
  • Expression of the plasmid DNA was detectable in
    all 9 patients who received liposome treatment
    (through detection of RNA) and there was partial
    restoration of the electrophysiological defect.
  • In most cases the response to low chloride
    perfusion was restored to about 20 of that seen
    in non-CF subjects, although in one patient the
    response to low chloride perfusion was within the
    normal range for non-CF subjects.
  • The maximal effect occurred 3 days after exposure
    to the liposome/DNA complexes, but reverted to
    pre-treatment levels 7 days after exposure.
  • As well as demonstrating detectable gene
    expression in patients, this study also showed
    that there were no adverse clinical effects and
    nasal biopsies showed no adverse histological or
    immunological changes.
  • CF gene therapy remains ineffective at present

45
Gene therapy- hypercholesterolemia
  • Familial hypercholesterolemia (FH)- dominant
    deficiency of LDL receptor
  • People with this inherited condition have
    dangerously high blood levels of cholesterol, in
    spite of their body weight or diet.
  • results from a defective gene that encodes a
    receptor found on the membranes of liver cells
    specific for low-density lipoprotein (LDL)bad
    cholesterol
  • Normally LDL enters liver cells via this
    receptor, after which the liver clears the body
    of LDL. But people with FH have too few
    functioning receptor molecules and cannot remove
    LDL from their blood. As a result, blood serum
    levels of LDL are too high in people with this
    condition, and many FH patients develop coronary
    artery disease.
  • In animal models, investigators demonstrated some
    success when corrective copies of the receptor
    gene were transferred into liver cells via a
    retroviral vector.
  • Human therapy- found hepatocytes can be cultured
    in vitro, and infused back into patient where
    they re-seed liver
  • Very invasive procedure

46
Familial hypercholesterolemia
  • The experience of one 28-year-old woman
    represents one of the better outcomes of this
    clinical trial.
  • The patient lacked any detectable functioning LDL
    receptor (homozygous mutant)
  • At the start of the trial, she had 482 milligrams
    of LDL in each deciliter (mg/dl) of blood, well
    over twice the normal level of 160 to 210 mg/dl.
  • Her liver cells were then treated with a
    retroviral vector containing the LDL-receptor
    gene. Within a few days, her serum cholesterol
    dropped by 180 mg/dl to about 300 mg/dl.
  • With additional cholesterol-lowering drugs, her
    LDL blood levels stabilized at around 356 mg/dl
    and remained there for about two and a half
    years. These levels, although lower than they
    were originally, are still higher than they ought
    to be.

47
Therapy for DMD
  • many difficulties in delivery
  • Initial positive results with mouse model using
    modified myoblasts have not been repeated with
    humans
  • Gene therapy approaches
  • Retroviral vectors cant be used because adult
    muscle fibers are non-dividing
  • Adenoviral vectors have been used for in vivo
    delivery to muscle fibers, but do not provide
    necessary continued expression
  • Size of dystrophin gene is limiting- cDNA 14 kb
  • Alternative method
  • Induce expression of dystrophin-related gene
    (utrophin) using gene therapy or drugs that
    stimulate utrophin expression

48
Limb girdle muscular dystrophy (1999)
  • Gene therapy approaches to treat muscular
    dystrophy have been hampered by an inability to
    successfully place the therapeutic genetic
    material into deficient muscle cells.
  • using a naturally-occurring hamster model of
    LGMD, researchers have developed a technique that
    successfully produces widespread transfer of
    corrective genetic material into muscle cells
    throughout an entire limb
  • In LGMD, the instability of muscle tissue is
    linked directly to the level of genetic
    disruption that occurs within the sarcoglycan
    complex - a critical muscle structure composed of
    four membrane-spanning proteins. Depending on the
    nature of the mutations that can affect any one
    of these proteins, the integrity of the muscle
    membrane is compromised - eventually resulting in
    muscle weakness that can range from a very mild
    form to a more severe, rapidly-progressing type
  • problem how best to gain access to the millions
    and millions of muscle cells that require genetic
    re-engineering. Dismissing intramuscular
    injection as an impractical technique (since
    literally thousands of injections might be
    needed), they proposed an intravascular route
    that would require some means of allowing infused
    genetic material (being carried in
    adeno-associated viruses) to seep out of the
    blood vessels into the surrounding muscle tissue.

49
Limb girdle muscular dystrophy (1999)
  • The viruses are millions of times bigger than
    oxygen molecules and too big to leave the blood
    vessels under normal circumstances.
  • The solution- make the blood vessels become
    leaky, temporarily, so that the viruses could
    leave the vessels and make contact with nearby
    muscle tissue.
  • Thus, histamine - a natural vessel destabilizer
    -- was added to the liquid solution carrying the
    adeno-associated viruses.
  • Infusing just a single limb - a leg - with the
    histamine-enhanced solution, scientists were able
    to achieve widespread gene transfer to all the
    muscles in that particular area of the body.
  • A 36-year-old man became the first person to
    receive a gene therapy injection for muscular
    dystrophy.
  • Injected a muscle on the top of his foot with
    genes for a muscle protein.
  • One of Decker's foot muscles received the
    therapeutic genes, while the same muscle of the
    other foot received a sham injection. Researchers
    will take biopsies to compare the condition of
    the two muscles after six weeks.

50
OTC deficiency
  • studies carried out at Institute for Human Gene
    Therapy (IHGT), formed in 1993 and headed by Dr.
    Jim Wilson
  • A deficiency of the urea cycle enzyme Ornithine
    Transcarbamylase (OTC) is a paradigm for
    metabolic diseases.
  • Genes deficient in this enzyme are unable to
    break down nitrogen, which leads to an
    accumulation of such toxic substances as ammonia.
    Investigators were recently approved to evaluate
    the utility of gene therapy for treating OTC
    deficiency.
  • When infused into the blood this recombinant
    virus targets the liver cells very specifically
    and efficiently.
  • Patients eligible for this clinical trial are
    adults partially deficient of OTC. This would
    include the affected males who live beyond
    adolescence and adult carrier females.
  • Participating patients undergo a procedure in
    which a catheter is inserted into a groin artery
    and advanced into the vessel that perfuses the
    liver.

51
OTC trial setback
  • Eighteen-year-old Jesse Gelsinger, a participant
    in the experimental gene therapy trial for
    ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) deficiency, died
    four days after being injected with corrective
    genetic material. 
  • Jesse was the 18th patient to participate in the
    Phase I clinical trial, which began in April of
    1997 as a means to develop an effective treatment
    for OTC deficiency - an inherited disorder that,
    in its most common form, causes death in affected
    newborn males because of their inability to
    properly process nitrogen in food proteins due to
    a genetic defect in the liver. 
  • None of the 17 other trial participants who
    preceded Jesse in the OTC trial developed any
    serious unexpected clinical responses to the gene
    therapy protocol
  • The findings suggest that the experimental drug
    used in the trial initiated an unusual and deadly
    immune-system response that led to multiple organ
    failure and death.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com