학술논문

Regulating the expression of therapeutic transgenes by controlled intake of dietary essential amino acids
Document Type
Report
Source
Nature Biotechnology. July 1, 2016, p746, 8 p.
Subject
Medical research
Medicine, Experimental
Gene therapy -- Methods
Amino acids -- Genetic aspects -- Health aspects
Genetic regulation -- Research
Biotechnology industry
Business
Research
Genetic aspects
Methods
Health aspects
Language
English
ISSN
1087-0156
Abstract
Widespread application of gene therapy will depend on the development of simple methods to regulate the expression of therapeutic genes. Here we harness an endogenous signaling pathway to regulate therapeutic gene expression through diet. The GCN2-eIF2α signaling pathway is specifically activated by deficiencies in any essential amino acid (EAA); EAA deficiency leads to rapid expression of genes regulated by ATF4-binding cis elements. We found that therapeutic genes under the control of optimized amino acid response elements (AAREs) had low basal expression and high induced expression. We applied our system to regulate the expression of TNFSF10(TRAIL) in the context of glioma therapy and found that intermittent activation of this gene by EEA-deficient meals retained its therapeutic efficacy while abrogating its toxic effects on normal tissue. The GCN2-eIF2α pathway is expressed in many tissues, including the brain, and is highly specific to EAA deficiency. Our system may be particularly well suited for intermittent regulation of therapeutic transgenes over short or long time periods.
Recent technological improvements in gene transfer vectors and the development of adequate gene delivery systems have led to substantial clinical successes in gene therapy (1). However, several barriers must be [...]