| Literature DB >> 28424756 |
Diana L Browning1, Grant D Trobridge1,2.
Abstract
Retroviral vector gene therapy is a promising approach to treating HIV-1. However, integrated vectors are mutagens with the potential to dysregulate nearby genes and cause severe adverse side effects. Leukemia has already been a documented severe adverse event in gene therapy clinical trials for the treatment of primary immunodeficiencies. These side effects will need to be reduced or avoided if retroviral vectors are to be used clinically for HIV-1 treatment. The addition of chromatin insulators to retroviral vectors is a potential strategy for reducing adverse side effects. Insulators have already been effectively used in retroviral vectors to reduce genotoxicity in pre-clinical studies. Here, we will review how insulators function, genotoxicity in gene therapy clinical trials, the design of insulated retroviral vectors, promising results from insulated retroviral vector studies, and considerations for the development of insulated retroviral treatment vectors for HIV-1 gene therapy.Entities:
Keywords: anti-HIV; clinical trial; gene therapy; genotoxicity; insertional mutagenesis; insulator; retroviral vector
Year: 2016 PMID: 28424756 PMCID: PMC5344246 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines4010004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1Retrovirus mediated mutagenesis. Proviruses can dysregulate host cell gene expression when integration occurs near a gene. (a) Enhancer elements within the retroviral vector can act on host cell promoters to increase expression; (b) Inefficient polyadenylation in the 3′ LTR leads to read-through transcription and increased expression of down-stream genes. Alternatively, integration within a host cell gene can cause aberrant expression by (c) promoting premature transcription termination or (d) forcing the formation of abnormal or viral/host cell gene transcripts. Green boxes denote the enhancer-promoter containing U3 of the retrovirus LTR and white boxes denote the R and U5 of the LTR. Hashed, plaid, and checkered boxes denote the retrovirus gag, pol, and env genes respectively.
Figure 2Insulator mechanisms of action. (a) Insulator elements recruit proteins that prevent inappropriate expression of genes. The barrier insulators (i) prevent promoter inactivation due to encroaching compact chromatin. The enhancer-blocking insulators (ii) prevent host cell gene promoters from being affected by nearby enhancers; (b) The enhancer-blocking insulators (blue stars) use multiple mechanisms to prevent host cell gene promoters from the influence of nearby enhancers. Prevention of enhancer (green rectangles) effects on promoters (grey rectangles) are achieved through (i) changing the chromatin architecture by forming domain loops where enhancers can only interact with promoters in the domain loop or (ii) by disrupting transcription factors (purple rectangle) recruited by enhancer elements. These actions require binding partners (yellow half circles) for insulating activity.
Integrations associated with adverse events in HSC (hematopoietic stem cells) gene therapy clinical trials.
| Clinical Trial | # Participants | # Adverse | Integration Associated with Mutagenesis | Reference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Oncogene | Position | kbp to TSS | +/− | ||||
| SCID-X1 | 20 | 5 | 1st intron | 2.0 | − | [ | |
| Upstream | 2.9 | + | [ | ||||
| 2nd intron | 10.6 | − | [ | ||||
| Upstream | 35.0 | − | [ | ||||
| Upstream | 49.5 | + | [ | ||||
| Upstream | 2.4 | − | [ | ||||
| WAS# | 10 | 7 | Upstream | 20.6 | − | [ | |
| Upstream | 32.3 | − | [ | ||||
| Upstream | 33.0 | − | [ | ||||
| Upstream | 1.5 | − | [ | ||||
| 1st intron | 8.7 | − | [ | ||||
| 1st intron *** | 24.7 | − | [ | ||||
| 2nd intron ** | 351.7 | − | [ | ||||
| 2nd intron | 299.5 | − | [ | ||||
| CGD | 17 | 3 | Downstream | NR | NR | [ | |
* BML1 integration in same clone as 3rd LMO2 integration; ** other integrations near oncogenes also found; *** contribution to development of AML (acute myeloid leukemia) after treatment for ALL (acute leukocyte leukemia); # reported for 6 of 7 patients with adverse events; transcription start sight (TSS); orientation of provirus with respect to oncogene (+/−); not reported or information unavailable (NR)
Figure 3Development and design of insulated replication incompetent retroviral vectors. (a) A replication competent retrovirus (b) is significantly modified so that only the elements necessary for genome production, encapsidation, and integration are still intact. (i) The replication incompetent vector has the viral enhancer and promoter elements removed from the U3 of the 3′ long terminal repeat (ΔU3) and the 5′ U3 is either a viral promoter or been replaced by a stronger promoter for vector production. The insulator is positioned in the 3′ ΔU3. During reverse transcription the 3′ insulator containing ΔU3 is then transferred to the 5′ long terminal repeat replacing the promoter used for vector production. (ii) The final vector DNA genome ready for integration is thus flanked by insulators; (c) The insulators in the integrated vector provirus prevent the enhancer elements within the therapeutic gene cassette from acting on the surrounding host genome.