| Literature DB >> 21699743 |
James Devaney1, Maya Contreras, John G Laffey.
Abstract
Acute lung injury (ALI) and acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) confer substantial morbidity and mortality, and have no specific therapy. The accessibility of the distal lung epithelium via the airway route, and the relatively transient nature of ALI/ARDS, suggest that the disease may be amenable to gene-based therapies. Ongoing advances in our understanding of the pathophysiology of ALI/ARDS have revealed multiple therapeutic targets for gene-based approaches. Strategies to enhance or restore lung epithelial and/or endothelial cell function, to strengthen lung defense mechanisms against injury, to speed clearance of infection and to enhance the repair process following ALI/ARDS have all demonstrated promise in preclinical models. Despite three decades of gene therapy research, however, the clinical potential for gene-based approaches to lung diseases including ALI/ARDS remains to be realized. Multiple barriers to effective pulmonary gene therapy exist, including the pulmonary architecture, pulmonary defense mechanisms against inhaled particles, the immunogenicity of viral vectors and the poor transfection efficiency of nonviral delivery methods. Deficits remain in our knowledge regarding the optimal molecular targets for gene-based approaches. Encouragingly, recent progress in overcoming these barriers offers hope for the successful translation of gene-based approaches for ALI/ARDS to the clinical setting.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21699743 PMCID: PMC3218971 DOI: 10.1186/cc10216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Gene therapy approaches used in preclinical ALI/ARDS models
| Approach | Advantages | Disadvantages | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adenoviral vectors (dsDNA genome) | Relatively easily produced Efficiently transfect lung epithelium [ | Immunogenic [ | Adenoviral transfer of genes for a surfactant enzyme [ |
| Adeno-associated virus vectors (ssDNA genome) | Good safety profile; less immunogenic Inherently replication deficient AAV-5 and AAV-6 lung epithelial tropism [ | Limited transgene size Difficult to produce in large quantities | AAV vector gene transfer demonstrated in multiple lung cell types including progenitor cells in both normal lungs and following naphthalene-induced ALI [ |
| Lentivirus vectors (RNA genome) | Transduce nondividing cells [ | Oncogenesis risk due to integration into genome [ | Lentiviral transfer of shRNA to silence CD36 gene expression suppresses silica-induced lung fibrosis in the rat [ |
| Plasmid transfer (closed dsDNA circles) | Easily produced at low cost | No specific cell targeting Very inefficient | Electroporation-mediated gene transfer of the Na+,K+-ATPase rescues endotoxin-induced lung injury [ |
| Nonviral DNA complexes | Complexes protect DNA Complexes facilitate cellular targeting [ | Less efficient than viral vectors | Cationic lipid-mediated transfer of the Na+,K+-ATPase gene ameliorated high-permeability pulmonary edema [ |
| DNA and RNA oligonucleotides (siRNA, shRNA, decoy oligonucleotides) | Easily produced at low cost Smaller molecules that can easily enter cells Target regulation of specific genes | No specific cell targeting | Specific siRNAs reduce inflammation-associated lung injury in humans [ |
| Mesenchymal stem/stromal cells | Systemic or intrapulmonary delivery Strategy used in human studies [ | Relatively expensive | MSCs expressing angiopoeitin-1 attenuate endotoxin-induced ALI [ |
| Fibroblasts | Systemic delivery Less expensive | Fibroblasts expressing angiopoeitin-1 attenuate endotoxin induced ALI [ |
AAV, adeno-associated virus; ALI, acute lung injury; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; CF, cystic fibrosis; CLP, cecal ligation and puncture; dsDNA, double-stranded DNA; IL, interleukin; MSC, mesenchymal stem/stromal cell; shRNA, small hairpin RNA; siRNA, small inhibiting RNA; ssDNA, single-stranded DNA.
Figure 1Schematic diagram of the mechanisms involved in viral vector-mediated gene therapy. The adenoviral vector encoding a new gene of interest binds to a cell membrane, becoming internalized within a vesicle, is subsequently released from the vesicle and is transported towards the nucleus, where it releases its genetic material, which is subsequently transcribed and translated to produce the therapeutic protein. This image is a work of the National Institutes of Health, part of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, and is in the public domain.
Technical challenges to gene-based therapies for ALI/ARDS models
| Pulmonary defense mechanisms against inhaled particles |
| Airway mucus and epithelial lining fluid |
| Glycocalyceal barrier |
| Tight intercellular epithelial junctions |
| Limited endocytosis at luminal surface |
| Difficulties in transducing the acutely injured lung |
| Loss of alveolar epithelium |
| Pulmonary edema |
| Collapsed and/or consolidated alveoli |
| Bronchial plugging by mucus and debris |
| Limitations of vector systems |
| Imunogenicity of viral vectors particularly in repeated doses |
| Limitations regarding transgene size |
| Limited transfection efficiency of nonviral vectors |
| Knowledge deficits regarding the optimal molecular targets |
ALI, acute lung injury; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Figure 2Adenovirus-mediated gene transfer enhances surfactant production, improves lung function and confers resistance to infection. Intratracheal delivery of adenovirus encoding a modified surfactant enzyme enhances lung production of surfactant, and (a) attenuated the decrement in lung elastance and (b) increased the survival time in mice infected with Pseudomonas aeruginosa. PEEP, positive end-expiratory pressure. Reproduced with permission from The Nature Publishing Group [49].
Figure 3NF-κB decoy oligodeoxynucleotides prevent acute lung injury in mice with cecal ligation and puncture-induced sepsis. The animals were subjected to sham operation (control), sepsis (10 hours after cecal ligation and puncture (CLP)), sepsis with the NF-κB pharmacologic inhibitor FR260330, and sepsis with transfection of NF-κB decoy or its scrambled form. Transpulmonary flux of radiolabeled albumin was used to assess changes in lung permeability. ***P <0.001 compared with the sham-operated control group. ###P <0.001 compared with the CLP group without treatment. Reproduced with permission from The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics [37].
Figure 4Gene-based therapies may be combined with stem cells to enhance their effect. Representative histologic images of lung sections demonstrate that modification of mesenchymal stem/stromal cells (MSCs) to overexpress angiopoeitin-1 (LPS/MSCs-pANGPT1) enhanced its efficacy in attenuating endotoxin-induced lung injury (LPS/Saline) compared with MSCs alone (LPS/MSCs) or MSCs overexpressing a nonfunctional gene (LPS/MSCs-pFLAG). Reproduced with permission from The Public Library of Science [39].
Future directions for gene-based therapies
| Viral vectors |
| Capsid protein modification to reduce immunogenicity [ |
| Capsid protein modification to enhance tissue specificity [ |
| Envelope protein pseudotyping |
| Nonviral vectors |
| Manipulation of lipoplex lipid content to enhance cellular uptake [ |
| Use of targeting peptides on lipoplexes and polyplexes [ |
| Strategies to enhance gene transfer; for example, electroporation, ultrasound, gene gun delivery |
| Gene expression strategies |
| Modifying transgene DNA to eliminate bacterial motifs [ |
| Development of high-efficiency tissue-specific promoters [ |
| Development of promoters that regulate gene expression [ |
| Enhanced therapeutic targeting |
| Nebulization technologies [ |
| Strategies to target the pulmonary endothelium [ |
| Improved cellular uptake of vector |
| Surface active agents to enhance vector spread [ |
| Reduce ubiquitination of viral capsid proteins [ |
| Better therapeutic targets |
| Enhancement or restoration of lung epithelial and/or endothelial cell function [ |
| Strengthening lung defense mechanisms against injury [ |
| Speeding clearance of inflammation and infection |
| Enhancement of the repair process following ALI/ARDS [ |
ALI, acute lung injury; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Figure 5Therapeutic potential of selectively targeting the pulmonary endothelium with systemically delivered gene-based therapies. The antioxidant enzyme catalase was conjugated with antibodies to the adhesion molecule PECAM. The anti-PECAM/catalase conjugate, but not a nonspecific IgG/catalase conjugate, bound specifically to the pulmonary endothelium, and attenuated hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) injury. (a) H2O2 produces a severe lung injury, (b) which is not attenuated by the nonspecific IgG/catalase conjugate. (c) In contrast, the anti-PECAM/catalase conjugate does attenuate lung injury. Reproduced with permission from the American Physiological Society [10].
Key points regarding gene-based therapies for ALI/ARDS
| ALI/ARDS may be amenable to gene-based therapies |
| Ongoing advances in our understanding of the pathophysiology of ALI/ARDS have revealed multiple therapeutic targets for gene-based approaches |
| Numerous gene-based approaches have demonstrated promise in relevant preclinical models |
| The clinical potential for gene-based approaches to ALI/ARDS remains to be realized |
| Multiple barriers exist to successful gene-based approaches for ALI/ARDS |
| A greater understanding of the molecular mechanisms underlying injury and repair in |
| ALI/ARDS, coupled with improvements in gene-based approaches, offer hope for ALI/ARDS |
ALI, acute lung injury; ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome.