| Literature DB >> 22272373 |
Jerusha Naidoo1, Deborah Young.
Abstract
Substantial progress has been made in the development of novel gene therapy strategies for central nervous system (CNS) disorders in recent years. However, unregulated transgene expression is a significant issue limiting human applications due to the potential side effects from excessive levels of transgenic protein that indiscriminately affect both diseased and nondiseased cells. Gene regulation systems are a tool by which tight tissue-specific and temporal regulation of transgene expression may be achieved. This review covers the features of ideal regulatory systems and summarises the mechanics of current exogenous and endogenous gene regulation systems and their utility in the CNS.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22272373 PMCID: PMC3261487 DOI: 10.1155/2012/595410
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurol Res Int ISSN: 2090-1860
Summary of use of gene regulation systems for in vivo CNS applications.
| Regulation system (VC*) | Stimuli/dose | Delivery vehicle | Species | Transgene | Comments [ref] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tet-Off (VC1) | Dox (300 | AAV | Rat | GFP | Some leakiness. No further transgene repression by increasing dox dosage [ |
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| Tet-On (VC2) | Dox (6 g/kg) | AAV | Rat | EGFP | No repression or basal expression data [ |
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| Tet-On (VC1 & 2) | Dox (2 mg/mL) | Ad | Rat | LacZ | Negligible expression following dox removal [ |
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| Tet-Off (VC1) | Dox | AAV | Rat | GDNF | Undetectable transgene levels at serum dox levels below those required for antimicrobial activity [ |
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| Tet-Off (VC2) | Dox (300 | AAV | Rat | EGFP | Low basal expression with addition of insulator sequences [ |
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| Tet-On (VC2) | Dox (600 | AAV | Rat | GDNF | Some basal expression [ |
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| Tet-Off (VC3) | Dox (2 mg/mL) | Ad | Rat | Caspase-9 & EGFP | Variable repression achieved; transgene dependent [ |
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| Tet-On (VC1) | Dox (2 mg/mL) | LV | Rat | Luciferase | Low basal expression [ |
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| Rapamycin | Rapamycin (10 mg/kg) | AAV | Rat | hAADC | Robust phenotypic response in 6-OHDA model. Low basal expression without phenotypic effect [ |
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| Rapamycin | AP21967 (1 mL/kg) | LV | Mouse | GFP & GDNF | No basal expression [ |
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| RU486 | RU486 (25 mg/kg) | HSV | Rat | LacZ | Very low basal expression [ |
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| HRE | 30 min hypoxia in a 3% O2 hypoxic chamber | Ad | Mouse | Luciferase | No transgene expression under normoxic conditions [ |
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| HRE | 60 min MCAO | Ad | Mouse | BDNF & EGFP | Neuroprotection & phenotypic changes seen. No comparison with unregulated transgene expression [ |
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| HRE | 45 min MCAO | AAV | Mouse | VEGF or LacZ | Angiogenesis seen. No transgene expression under nonischemic conditions [ |
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| HRE | Spinal cord contusion injury | Naked plasmid injection | Rat | VEGF | Locomotor recovery compared to uninjected controls [ |
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| HRE | Spinal cord contusion injury | Naked plasmid injection | Rat | Luciferase | Higher transgene expression in injured compared to normal spinal cord [ |
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| HRE | Spinal cord contusion injury |
| Rat | Luciferase | Low transgene expression in normal spinal cord [ |
*VC, Vector Configuration (see Figure 2); Dox, doxycycline; GFP, Green Fluorescent Protein; EGFP, Enhanced Green Fluorescent Protein.
Figure 1Mechanics of tetracycline regulated systems. A constitutively active promoter drives expression of tetracycline transactivators (tTAs) or reverse tetracycline transactivators (rtTAs). (a) Tet-Off system. tTAs are able to bind to the tet-operator sequence (tetO) in the absence, but not in the presence of doxycycline (dox) to drive transgene expression. (b) Tet-On system. rtTAs are able to bind to the TRE in the presence, but not in the absence of dox to drive transgene expression. tetR: tetracycline repressor; VP16: viral protein 16; CMV: cytomegalovirus.
Figure 2Different configurations the tetracycline system has been incorporated into viral vectors for use in the brain. (1) Two right-facing cistrons direct transactivator and transgene expression in a single vector [4–7]. (2) One bidirectional promoter driving expression of the transgene and transactivators in a single construct [5, 6, 8–10]. (3) Two vectors are used: one bidirectional construct directing expression of two transgenes and one driving expression of transactivators [11, 12]. ITR: inverted terminal repeats; PolyA: polyadenylation signal; TetO: tetracycline operator sequence; CMV: cytomegalovirus; tTA: tetracycline transactivator; rtTA: reverse tetracycline transactivator.
Figure 3Schematic of the rapamycin regulation system. The constitutively active human cytomegalovirus (hCMV) promoter drives expression of two fusion transcription factors. (Top left) A transcription factor consisting of three copies of the FKBP protein fused to a ZFHD1 DNA binding domain. (Top right) A transcription factor consisting of a FRAP protein with a p65 activation domain. Rapamycin enables dimerization of the transcription factors, with enable binding to 12xZFHD1 binding sites and activation, respectively, driving expression of a transgene upstream of a minimal CMV promoter. ZFHD1: zinc finger homeodomain-1; FKBP: FK-binding protein; FRAP: FKBP-rapamycin associated protein [23].
Figure 4Schematic of the RU486 regulation system. A constitutively active promoter drives expression of a fusion protein consisting of a VP16 activation domain, a Gal4 DNA-binding domain (DBD) and a progesterone ligand-binding domain (Prog LBD). Binding of RU486 to the Prog LBD enables dimerization and binding to 4x Gal 4-binding sites upstream of a TATA box driving transgene expression [28]. Poly A, poly adenylation signal.