Improved Specificity and Safety of Anti-Hepatitis B Virus TALENs Using Obligate Heterodimeric FokI Nuclease Domains.
Tiffany SmithPrashika SinghKay Ole ChmielewskiKristie BloomToni CathomenPatrick ArbuthnotAbdullah ElyPublished in: Viruses (2021)
Persistent hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection remains a serious medical problem worldwide, with an estimated global burden of 257 million carriers. Prophylactic and therapeutic interventions, in the form of a vaccine, immunomodulators, and nucleotide and nucleoside analogs, are available. Vaccination, however, offers no therapeutic benefit to chronic sufferers and has had a limited impact on infection rates. Although immunomodulators and nucleotide and nucleoside analogs have been licensed for treatment of chronic HBV, cure rates remain low. Transcription activator-like effector nucleases (TALENs) designed to bind and cleave viral DNA offer a novel therapeutic approach. Importantly, TALENs can target covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) directly with the potential of permanently disabling this important viral replicative intermediate. Potential off-target cleavage by engineered nucleases leading to toxicity presents a limitation of this technology. To address this, in the context of HBV gene therapy, existing TALENs targeting the viral core and surface open reading frames were modified with second- and third-generation FokI nuclease domains. As obligate heterodimers these TALENs prevent target cleavage as a result of FokI homodimerization. Second-generation obligate heterodimeric TALENs were as effective at silencing viral gene expression as first-generation counterparts and demonstrated an improved specificity in a mouse model of HBV replication.
Keyphrases
- hepatitis b virus
- sars cov
- gene expression
- gene therapy
- liver failure
- dna binding
- mouse model
- healthcare
- circulating tumor
- genome editing
- cell free
- single molecule
- dna methylation
- crispr cas
- dendritic cells
- molecular docking
- transcription factor
- minimally invasive
- oxidative stress
- risk factors
- regulatory t cells
- cancer therapy
- risk assessment
- structural basis
- immune response
- inflammatory response
- circulating tumor cells