波音游戏-波音娱乐城赌球打不开

Reveal the correlations between gene therapy vectors and toxicity

 

The mice undergone gene therapy vector received various tests
The mice undergone gene therapy vector received various tests, including measurement of optomotor responses, for the analysis of their visual functions and eye tissues.

Gene therapy brings great hope to cure many inherited or rare diseases. However, as more and more gene therapies are expected to be approved for clinical trials, new problems may arise. Adeno-associated virus, AAV, does not cause any known disease and are commonly used as vector in gene therapy. But it was found that sometimes it can cause toxicity and inflammation in targeted tissues in animals and humans. A joint-research by City University of Hong Kong (CityU) and Harvard Medical School has revealed that the AAV toxicity is correlated with the cis-regulatory sequences which control gene expression in the virus genome. 

In late 2017, Luxturna, the AAV vector gene therapy to treat a rare inherited blinding disease, was proven for safety and efficiency by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA). This marked a milestone for gene therapy and has brought great hope to people with rare diseases. Earlier this year, the FDA anticipated that by 2020 they will be receiving more than 200 investigational new drug applications, and by 2025, they will be approving 10 to 20 cell and gene therapy products a year. 

However, AAV is not completely problem-free. It has been reported to cause inflammation and toxicity in the eyes and other organs, but this problem had not been studied carefully. 

The research group led by Dr Xiong Wenjun, Assistant Professor of Department of Biomedical Sciences (BMS) at CityU, has been interested in developing gene therapy vectors to treat retinal degeneration diseases. 

In a joint research with Harvard Medical School, they found that while some AAV vectors were toxic in the eyes of mice, the others were perfectly nontoxic. The toxicity, when present, could cause inflammation, abolish the therapeutic effect of the gene therapy vector, and induce retinal cell death and severe visual function loss. 

They tried to track down the problem and found that the toxicity was not caused by the viral shell proteins nor the virus production methods. Instead, toxicity was associated with certain cis-regulatory sequences, which control gene expression in the virus genome. 

They found that a common property of the toxic cis-regulatory sequences is that they drive broad and strong gene expression in the eye, especially in retinal pigment epithelial cells. The cis-regulatory sequences that direct gene expression only in the photoreceptor cells were non-toxic, as far as they tested. 

The findings were published in science journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), titled "AAV cis-regulatory sequences are correlated with ocular toxicity". 

“Our study suggests to choose cell type-specific over broadly active cis-regulatory sequences whenever possible to avoid toxicity. If sensitive and organ-specific assays are developed and tested for different manifestation of toxicity, safer vectors could be designed to avoid inflammation and toxicity due to viral vector genomic elements,” says Dr Xiong. 

This work was first started when the initial observation of AAV toxicity was made by Dr Xiong when she was a postdoc at Harvard Medical School. Later, her research team at CityU, in collaboration with Professor Constance Cepko’s lab at Harvard Medical School, carried out further investigation. The work by the two teams together will help the researchers in field to choose and design safer AAV vectors for gene therapy trials. 

Dr Xiong and Professor Cepko are the correspondence authors of the paper. The first co-authors are Dr Xiong, and Dr David M. Wu and Dr Xue Yunlu from Harvard Medical School. Other authors include PhD student Mai Shuyi from BMS Department.

Dr Xiong Wenjun
Dr Xiong Wenjun (right) hopes the findings can help researchers in the field to choose and design safer AAV vectors for gene therapy trials.

 

你可能感興趣

聯(lián)絡(luò)資料

傳訊及數(shù)據(jù)研究處

聯(lián)絡(luò)方法
電話(huà):

+852 3442-9317

傳真:

+852 3442-0337

位置
香港特別行政區(qū)九龍九龍?zhí)吝_(dá)之路83號(hào)香港城市大學(xué)鄭翼之樓4樓4127-28室

於「谷歌地圖」開(kāi)啟

於「校園地圖」開(kāi)啟

香港特別行政區(qū)九龍九龍?zhí)吝_(dá)之路83號(hào)香港城市大學(xué)鄭翼之樓4樓4127-28室

Back to top
唐朝百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则 | 362百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则| 太阳城百家乐试玩优惠| 幸运水果机游戏| 爱赢娱乐城资讯网| 百家乐官网技巧看| 88娱乐城开户| 百家乐专用台布| 皇冠网h| 奇迹百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则 | 大发888娱乐场菲律宾| CEO百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则| 爱玩棋牌官方下载| 娱乐城百家乐论坛| 翼城县| 威尼斯人娱乐平台网上百家乐| 平博娱乐| 太阳城百家乐外挂| bet365网址主页| 风水24山向哪些不能兼| 顶级赌场官方客户端下载| 永利百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则 | 宝龙百家乐官网娱乐城| 职业百家乐的玩法技巧和规则 | 香港百家乐玩法| 百家乐官网娱乐平台真人娱乐平台 | 云博备用网址| 鲨鱼百家乐游戏平台| 南宁百家乐官网赌机| 博盈娱乐| 威尼斯人娱乐城信誉好吗| 百家乐庄家的胜率| 百家乐官网做庄家必赢诀窍| 金都娱乐| 威尼斯人娱乐城金杯娱乐城| 真钱百家乐五湖四海全讯网| 博之道百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则 | 百家乐官网专打和局| 皇冠现金网信誉| 百家乐蔬菜配送公司| 百家乐玩家技巧分享|