15/10/02说明:此前论坛服务器频繁出错,现已更换服务器。今后论坛继续数据库备份,不备份上传附件。

肝胆相照论坛

 

 

肝胆相照论坛 论坛 学术讨论& HBV English 基因编辑工具治疗慢性乙型肝炎?
查看: 1033|回复: 4
go

基因编辑工具治疗慢性乙型肝炎? [复制链接]

Rank: 8Rank: 8

现金
62111 元 
精华
26 
帖子
30441 
注册时间
2009-10-5 
最后登录
2022-12-28 

才高八斗

1
发表于 2017-2-7 07:01 |只看该作者 |倒序浏览 |打印

                                                                        Can Gene-Editing Tools Cure Chronic Hepatitis B?                                                       

                Written by Kendall Morgan. Posted in NC TraCS News on February 06, 2017       

                                                Researchers from Duke and UNC team up to find an answer, with funding from the two institutions' NIH Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSA).
For hundreds of millions of people around the world with chronic hepatitis B infection, anti-viral treatments do a good job of keeping the virus under wraps. Anti-viral treatments are essential in slowing damage to the liver, reducing the chance of liver cancer, and helping people live longer. But in the vast majority of cases, there is no end to the infection. If a patient stops medication for any reason, the hepatitis B virus (HBV) re-emerges. The cause of its resilience is circular bits of DNA, called covalently closed circular DNA, or cccDNA, that lurk in the liver cells of infected patients.
Bryan Cullen, PhD (Duke) and Lishan Su, PhD (UNC)"Treatment blocks new viral replication," said Lishan Su, a professor of microbiology and immunology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. "It doesn't touch this cDNA." When treatment stops, new virus is produced from these cccDNA templates, he continued. As a result, "you need almost lifetime (or very long-term) treatment."
That reality makes viral cccDNA a prime target for the development of new and more effective treatments with the potential to knock HBV infections out for good. Now, with support from the Clinical and Translational Science Awards (CTSAs) at Duke and UNC, Su and Bryan Cullen, in Duke's Department of Molecular Genetics & Microbiology, think they are on the right track to producing just such a treatment.
Cut It OutTheir effort builds on major advances in recent years in the development of a gene-editing tool called CRISPR/Cas. The CRISPR/Cas system uses tiny snippets of "guide RNA" to direct the scissor-like enzyme Cas9 to just the right spot in the genome. The technology has gained considerable attention for its potential to cure genetic conditions such as sickle cell disease, which trace to a single, well-known typo in the DNA sequence. Once the DNA is cut, cells can be directed to replace mutated sequence with a healthy sequence or, in some instances, to edit in new functions.
But getting CRISPR/Cas9 to work against HBV and specifically those circular ccDNA is actually much easier than all that. The researchers think they can destroy the viral DNA by cutting it alone.
As Cullen says, "we're just trying to whack the cccDNA and destroy it." There's no need to do anything more.
In fact, Cullen and Su hope to use CRISPR/Cas to do exactly what it was designed to do over the course of millions of years of evolution. CRISPR originates from the adaptive immune systems of bacteria, which rely on it to snip and destroy the DNA genomes of bacterial viruses, called bacteriophages, that infect them.
"This is what it was made for," Cullen said. "It's a bacterial defense mechanism that's specific for DNA bacteriophage and it is designed to cleave the DNA of the bacteriophage and destroy them. So we're repurposing a bacterial antiviral defense mechanism to try to treat a virus in a human setting."
Fit it InIn fact, Su and Cullen have already shown that the approach works well in tissue culture. They are working now on ways to deliver CRISPR/Cas to the liver, first in mice with humanized livers and ultimately in people. The researchers aim to use a viral vector used in many older approaches to gene therapy to get Cas9 where it's needed in the liver. They know from years of experience by other researchers in the field that it's feasible to get a viral vector carrying a therapeutic load of DNA into nearly every liver cell.
The challenge, as Su and Cullen explain it, is to find a way to package CRISPR into viral vectors for delivery. The best-studied form of CRISPR/Cas comes from Streptococcus pyogenes and it's too big to fit. The researchers are exploring the possibility of using a Cas9 derived instead from Staph aureus, which offers the same basic function in a more compact form.
Partners on the path from mice to mankind"We've done a lot of experiments in vitro and the question then is whether we can get a good readout in an in vivo model system where we're actually trying to treat HBV in human hepatocytes in an animal model," Cullen said. "Hopefully if that works well then we can interest an industrial partner in taking this forward in some way."
"We have been interested in working toward an HBV cure for many years and the CRISPR technology offers a very exciting possibility to either completely get rid of the cccDNA or at least impair it's ability to produce more viral proteins," Su said.
Either way, they're getting close to what looks like the first HBV cure.
Su and Cullen met some 20 years ago, long before Su made the move to UNC. They make a great pair. Su is an expert in working with HBV and humanized liver mice and Cullen brings expertise in molecular biology including gene-editing tools to the table.
"It was a no-brainer that we should work together for this project," Su said. "But it wouldn't have happened without the Duke/UNC CTSA Consortium pilot funding."
       
                Tags: Duke/UNC Collaboration

Rank: 8Rank: 8

现金
62111 元 
精华
26 
帖子
30441 
注册时间
2009-10-5 
最后登录
2022-12-28 

才高八斗

2
发表于 2017-2-7 07:03 |只看该作者
基因编辑工具治疗慢性乙型肝炎?

作者:Kendall Morgan。发表在NC TraCS新闻2017年2月6日

来自杜克大学和UNC的研究人员共同寻找答案,由两家机构的NIH临床和转化科学奖(CTSA)提供资金。

对于世界上有数以亿计的慢性乙型肝炎感染的人来说,抗病毒治疗可以很好地保护病毒。抗病毒治疗对于减缓对肝脏的损害,减少肝癌的机会,以及帮助人们的寿命更长是至关重要的。但在绝大多数情况下,感染没有结束。如果患者因任何原因停止服用药物,乙型肝炎病毒(HBV)会重新出现。其弹性的原因是称为共价闭合环状DNA的DNA或称为cccDNA的DNA,其潜伏在感染患者的肝细胞中。
Bryan Cullen,博士(Duke)和Lishan Su博士(UNC)
Bryan Cullen,博士(Duke)和Lishan Su博士(UNC)

“治疗阻止新的病毒复制,”Lishan苏,北卡罗来纳大学,教堂山的微生物学和免疫学教授说。 “它不接触这个cDNA。当治疗停止时,从这些cccDNA模板产生新的病毒,他继续。因此,“你需要几乎一生(或非常长期)的治疗。

这一现实使得病毒cccDNA成为开发新的更有效的治疗方法的主要目标,有可能敲除HBV感染良好。现在,在Duke和UNC的临床和转化科学奖(CTSAs)的支持下,Duke的分子遗传学和微生物学部门的Su和Bryan Cullen认为他们正在正确的道路上生产这样的治疗。
剪出来

CRISPR / Cas系统使用微小的“指导RNA”片段指导剪刀样酶Cas9到一个称为CRISPR /基因组的基因编辑工具的开发的正确位置。该技术已经获得了极大的关注,因为其潜力可以治愈遗传疾病,如镰状细胞病,这种疾病跟踪DNA序列中单一的,众所周知的错误。一旦切割了DNA,可以将细胞定向为用健康序列替代突变序列,或者在一些情况下,在新功能中编辑。

但是让CRISPR / Cas9针对HBV工作,特别是那些环状ccDNA实际上比所有这些容易得多。研究人员认为它们可以通过单独切割来破坏病毒DNA。

正如Cullen所说,“我们只是想攻击cccDNA并销毁它。没有必要再做任何事情。

事实上,Cullen和Su希望使用CRISPR / Cas来完成它在数百万年的演变过程中所做的设计。 CRISPR起源于细菌的适应性免疫系统,其依赖于其剪切和破坏感染它们的称为噬菌体的细菌病毒的DNA基因组。

“这是它的制作,”卡伦说。 “这是一种针对DNA噬菌体的细菌防御机制,其设计用于切割噬菌体的DNA并将其破坏。因此我们重新利用细菌抗病毒防御机制尝试在人类环境中治疗病毒。
适合它

事实上,Su和Cullen已经表明,该方法在组织培养中工作良好。他们现在正在开发将CRISPR / Cas递送到肝脏的方法,首先在具有人源化肝脏的小鼠中,最终在人中。病毒载体用于许多老方法的基因治疗,以获得Cas9,它需要在肝脏。他们从这一领域的其他研究人员的多年的经验知道,可以获得携带治疗负荷的DNA几乎每个肝细胞的病毒载体。

正如Su和Cullen解释的那样,挑战是找到一种将CRISPR包装成病毒载体用于递送的方法。最好研究的CRISPR / Cas形式来自化脓链球菌,它太大而不适合。研究人员正在探索使用Cas9衍生物而不是金黄色葡萄球菌的可能性,其以更紧凑的形式提供相同的基本功能。
从小鼠到人类的道路上的合作伙伴

“我们已经在体外进行了大量的实验,然后问题是我们是否可以在体内模型系统中获得良好的读数,我们实际上试图在动物模型中治疗人肝细胞中的HBV,”Cullen说。 “希望如果这种方式工作得很好,那么我们可以让一个工业合作伙伴以某种方式推进这一进程。

“我们一直对解决HBV治疗感兴趣多年,CRISPR技术提供了一个非常令人兴奋的可能性,完全摆脱cccDNA或至少削弱其生产更多的病毒蛋白质的能力,”苏说。

无论哪种方式,他们都接近了看起来像第一次HBV治愈。

苏和卡伦在大约20年前见面,很久以前苏就把移动到UNC。 他们做一个伟大的对。 Su是HBV和人源化肝脏小鼠工作的专家,Cullen带来了分子生物学方面的专业知识,包括基因编辑工具。

“这是一个没有脑子,我们应该一起为这个项目,”苏说。 “但是,如果没有公爵/ UNC CTSA联盟试点资金,就不会发生。

标签:Duke / UNC合作

Rank: 9Rank: 9Rank: 9

现金
17064 元 
精华
12 
帖子
9399 
注册时间
2007-6-26 
最后登录
2017-11-25 

风雨同舟

3
发表于 2017-2-7 18:50 |只看该作者
马克
日行一善(百善孝为先)

Rank: 5Rank: 5

现金
577 元 
精华
帖子
442 
注册时间
2003-11-24 
最后登录
2023-1-17 
4
发表于 2017-2-7 18:51 |只看该作者
请问SW,人源化肝脏是把人干细胞基因注入到小鼠吗?

Rank: 8Rank: 8

现金
62111 元 
精华
26 
帖子
30441 
注册时间
2009-10-5 
最后登录
2022-12-28 

才高八斗

5
发表于 2017-2-7 19:23 |只看该作者
回复 商业战士 的帖子

这是一个非常专业的领域.我知道一点点.

一种人源化肝脏:
1. 在特殊小鼠进行部分肝切除;
2. 然后注射人肝细胞;
3. 人 肝细胞将主要重新增殖小鼠的肝脏.
‹ 上一主题|下一主题
你需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 注册

肝胆相照论坛

GMT+8, 2024-5-16 01:21 , Processed in 0.013986 second(s), 11 queries , Gzip On.

Powered by Discuz! X1.5

© 2001-2010 Comsenz Inc.