Prolonged activity of the transposase helper may raise safety concerns during DNA transposon-based gene therapy

DNA transposon-based gene delivery vectors represent a promising new branch of randomly integrating vector development for gene therapy. For the side-by-side evaluation of the piggyBac and Sleeping Beauty systems—the only DNA transposons currently employed in clinical trials—during therapeutic inter...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular therapy. Methods & clinical development 2023-06, Vol.29, p.145-159
Hauptverfasser: Imre, Gergely, Takács, Bertalan, Czipa, Erik, Drubi, Andrea Bakné, Jaksa, Gábor, Latinovics, Dóra, Nagy, Andrea, Karkas, Réka, Hudoba, Liza, Vásárhelyi, Bálint Márk, Pankotai-Bodó, Gabriella, Blastyák, András, Hegedűs, Zoltán, Germán, Péter, Bálint, Balázs, Ahmed Abdullah, Khaldoon Sadiq, Kopasz, Anna Georgina, Kovács, Anita, Nagy, László G., Sükösd, Farkas, Pintér, Lajos, Rülicke, Thomas, Barta, Endre, Nagy, István, Haracska, Lajos, Mátés, Lajos
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:DNA transposon-based gene delivery vectors represent a promising new branch of randomly integrating vector development for gene therapy. For the side-by-side evaluation of the piggyBac and Sleeping Beauty systems—the only DNA transposons currently employed in clinical trials—during therapeutic intervention, we treated the mouse model of tyrosinemia type I with liver-targeted gene delivery using both transposon vectors. For genome-wide mapping of transposon insertion sites we developed a new next-generation sequencing procedure called streptavidin-based enrichment sequencing, which allowed us to identify approximately one million integration sites for both systems. We revealed that a high proportion of piggyBac integrations are clustered in hot regions and found that they are frequently recurring at the same genomic positions among treated animals, indicating that the genome-wide distribution of Sleeping Beauty-generated integrations is closer to random. We also revealed that the piggyBac transposase protein exhibits prolonged activity, which predicts the risk of oncogenesis by generating chromosomal double-strand breaks. Safety concerns associated with prolonged transpositional activity draw attention to the importance of squeezing the active state of the transposase enzymes into a narrower time window. [Display omitted] Mates and colleagues describe a potential safety concern for DNA transposon-based gene therapy. It is due to a longer than necessary active period of the transposase enzyme for certain systems. This draws attention to the importance of squeezing the active state of the transposase enzymes into a narrower time window.
ISSN:2329-0501
2329-0501
DOI:10.1016/j.omtm.2023.03.003