M4 Gene therapy: Non-viral strategies Flashcards
3 main strategies of development of therapeutics agents for treatment of DMD
- Prevention of the secondary consequences of the phenotypic defect (generally pharmacological therapies)
- Correction of genetic defect – replace the defective gene or protein (gene therapy)
- Cell therapy (myoblast transfer therapy)
Combining therapy = most efficacious
1) Prevention of secondary consequences of the phenotypic defect
- Aimed at preserving healthy muscle tissue
- Delaying disease progression
- Reduce muscle fibrosis
2) Correction of genetic defect – replace the defective gene or protein (gene therapy)
- Approaches to restore or replace the defective genes
- Most useful in treatment of genetic causes of muscle wasting (i.e. muscular dystrophy)
3) Cell therapy( Myoblast transfer therapy)
- Regenerate or replace lost muscle tissue’
What is gene therapy?
- experimental technique that uses genes to treat or prevent disease
- Replacing mutated gene that causes disease with a healthy copy
- Altering a mutated gene to restore functionality
- Introducing a new gene into body to help fight a disease
Tool: Vector (mode of delivery)
- A deliver vehicle that carry a engineered genetic construct (carries gene of interest into the cell)
- Influence delivery method, expression stability, and safety
- E.g.:
- Naked DNA/RNA fragment
- Protein/lipid complex
- Virion
- Whole cell
Tool: gene expression therapy (What you are delivering)
- 3 elements:
- Promoter (non-coding DNA that controls expression of gene of interest)
- Constitutive (turns gene on when cells get into gene and stay on - high level of expression)
- Tissue specific (only turned on in the cells that elicit benefit)
- Inducible (Control length of time that gene is expressed for)
- Gene of interest (Downstream of promoter)
- Native or modified
- Able to code for protein or regulatory RNA
- Able to add tags for easier identification
- Transcript stabilising element
- Enhances lifespan of the transcript
Criteria for gene therapy tool
- Enter skeletal muscle cells
- Enter heart muscles
- DMD also affects heart cells
- Specific to heart and muscles cells
- Not cause harm
- Correct genetic impairment
What percentage is muscle is needed to be treated before seeing improvements in quality of life?
- Only 20% of the skeletal muscles + heart needs to be treated → to see improvements in quality of life
Considerations for therapy
- Route of delivery
- Systemic/muscle to muscle?
- Carrying capacity
- Is there a vector that can deliver entire fragment
- Timing of delivery
- Patient-specific vs generic therapy
- Immune response
- Potentially to vector or to dystrophin itself
Non-viral gene therapy for DMD
- Unencapsulated plasmid delivery
- Delivery of naked DNA/RNA
- Dystrophin restoration
- Stop codong read-through
- Exon skipping
What is unencapsulated plasmid delivery
- Injection of muscles with naked plasmid DNA
- Safe, simple, cost effective
- BUT low efficacy (1% of fibres expressed reporter gene)
How can unencapsulated plasmid delivery’s efficacy be improved?
- Protect from DNA degradation
- Combine with carrier molecule
- Put inside lipid complex → better transport through lipid membrane
- Ultrasound → increase membrane permeability
- Electroporation
- Electrical pulse across muscle to assist DNA to pass cell membrane
- But may result in damage to muscle
- Good efficacy with hyaluronidase (a compound which breaks down the ECM)
Adv/Dadv of unencapsulated plasmid delivery
- ADV:
- Able to deliver full length
- Safe, simple, cost-effective
- Dadv
- Low efficacy in absence of adjunctive therapy
- Localised delivery only
- Plasmid DNA molecules decrease overtime
Dystrophin restoration
- stop codon read-through
- 10-15% from non-sense mutation in DMD
- Allows transcription machinery to read through stop codon and restore dystrophin expression