A Small-Molecule-Responsive Riboswitch Enables Conditional Induction of Viral Vector-Mediated Gene Expression in Mice.
Benjamin StrobelMatthias J DüchsDragica BlazevicPhilipp RechtsteinerClemens BraunKatja S Baum-KrokerBernhard SchmidThomas CiossekDirk GottschlingJörg S HartigSebastian KreuzPublished in: ACS synthetic biology (2020)
Adeno-associated viral (AAV) vector-mediated gene therapy holds great potential for future medical applications. However, to facilitate safer and broader applicability and to enable patient-centric care, therapeutic protein expression should be controllable, ideally by an orally administered drug. The use of protein-based systems is considered rather undesirable, due to potential immunogenicity and the limited coding space of AAV. Ligand-dependent riboswitches, in contrast, are small and characterized by an attractive mode-of-action based on mRNA-self-cleavage, independent of coexpressed foreign protein. While a promising approach, switches available to date have only shown moderate potency in animals. In particular, ON-switches that induce transgene expression upon ligand administration so far have achieved rather disappointing results. Here we present the utilization of the previously described tetracycline-dependent ribozyme K19 for controlling AAV-mediated transgene expression in mice. Using this tool switch, we provide first proof for the feasibility of clinically desired key features, including multiorgan functionality, potent regulation (up to 15-fold induction), reversibility, and the possibility to fine-tune and repeatedly induce expression. The systematic assessment of ligand and reporter protein plasma levels further enabled the characterization of pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic relationships. Thus, our results strongly support future efforts to develop engineered riboswitches for applications in clinical gene therapy.
Keyphrases
- gene therapy
- binding protein
- poor prognosis
- small molecule
- gene expression
- protein protein
- healthcare
- sars cov
- magnetic resonance
- palliative care
- quality improvement
- current status
- crispr cas
- high fat diet induced
- magnetic resonance imaging
- case report
- human health
- climate change
- contrast enhanced
- pain management
- dna binding
- drug delivery