| Literature DB >> 33959386 |
V V Skopenkova1,2,3, T V Egorova1,2, M V Bardina1,2,3.
Abstract
Many genetic diseases that are responsible for muscular disorders have been described to date. Gene replacement therapy is a state-of-the-art strategy used to treat such diseases. In this approach, the functional copy of a gene is delivered to the affected tissues using viral vectors. There is an urgent need for the design of short, regulatory sequences that would drive a high and robust expression of a therapeutic transgene in skeletal muscles, the diaphragm, and the heart, while exhibiting limited activity in non-target tissues. This review focuses on the development and improvement of muscle-specific promoters based on skeletal muscle α-actin, muscle creatine kinase, and desmin genes, as well as other genes expressed in muscles. The current approaches used to engineer synthetic muscle-specific promoters are described. Other elements of the viral vectors that contribute to tissue-specific expression are also discussed. A special feature of this review is the presence of up-to-date information on the clinical and preclinical trials of gene therapy drug candidates that utilize muscle-specific promoters. Copyright ® 2021 National Research University Higher School of Economics.Entities:
Keywords: AAV; Gene therapy; muscle-specific promoters; natural promoters; synthetic promoters
Year: 2021 PMID: 33959386 PMCID: PMC8084301 DOI: 10.32607/actanaturae.11063
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Naturae ISSN: 2075-8251 Impact factor: 1.845
Fig. 2Promoters based on the ACTA1/HSA gene. (A) – the full-length HSA promoter includes the distal region, the proximal region (PR), and the basal region, which consists of the noncoding exon (+1...+90) and the first intron fragment (+91...+239); (B) – shortened version of the HSA promoter; (C) – the chimeric HSA/CMV promoter consisting of a fragment of the HSA promoter and the CMV promoter
Inherited muscle disorders and the potential gene therapy
| Disorder | Mutated | Inheritance | Protein | Gene therapy drugs* in clinical and preclinical studies |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duchenne muscular dystrophy | DMD | XR | Dystrophin | CT:AAVrh74.MHCK7.miDMD NCT03769116 |
| Danon disease | LAMP2 | XR | XR | PCT: AAV9.CAG.LAMP2B [ |
| Barth syndrome | TAZ | XR | Tafazzin | PCT: AAV9.Des.TAZ [ |
| Myotubular myopathy | MTM1 | XR | Myotubularin | PCT: AAV8.DES.hMTM1 [ |
| Primary merosin deficiency | LAMA2 | AR | Merosin | PCT: AAV9.CB.mini-agrin [ |
| Pompe disease | GAA | AR | α-1,4-Glucosidase | PCT: AAV2/8.MHCK7.hGAA [ |
| Limb-girdle muscular dystrophy LGMD, 2A | CAPN3 | AR | Calpain 3 | PCT: AAV9.desmin.hCAPN3 [ |
| LGMD, 2B | DYSF | AR | Dysferlin | CT: rAAVrh.74.MHCK7.DYSF NCT02710500 |
| LGMD, 2D | SGCA | AR | α-Sarcoglycan | CT: rAAV1.tMCK.hαSG NCT00494195 |
| LGMD, 2E | SGCB | AR | β-Sarcoglycan | CT:scAAVrh74.MHCK7.hSGCB NCT03652259 |
| LGMD, 2I | FKRP | AR | Fukutinrelated protein | PCT: AAV9.Des.mFkrp [ |
| Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy | PABPN1 | AD | PABPN1 | PCT: AAV9.spc512.PABPN1 [ |
*Drug candidate name includes information about AAV serotype, promoter and transgene.
Note: AD – autosomal dominant; AR – autosomal recessive; XR – X-linked recessive; PCT – preclinical trials; CT – clinical trials.