Gene
Therapy Microbicide Protects Mice Against HIV
SUMMARY
CD4 cells engineered to knock out HIV genes or CCR5 co-receptors
blocked viral infection in laboratory cells and humanized
mice, suggesting they can be used in a vaginal microbicide
to prevent sexual transmission of HIV. |
Below
is an edited excerpt from a press release issued by Children's
Hospital Boston describing the research and its findings.
Mouse
Studies Point to Long-Lasting Protection against
HIV Infection Using Topical, RNAi-based Microbicide
Using
a technique that silences genes promoting infection, researchers
have developed a novel, topically-applied molecular microbicide
capable of preventing HIV transmission. The microbicide is
predicted to have long-lasting effects in mice, opening the
door to developing an intravaginal microbicide that could
protect women against HIV infection potentially for weeks
at a time and bolster public health efforts to halt the spread
of HIV/AIDS.
The study, led by Lee Adam Wheeler and Judy Lieberman, MD,
PhD, of the Immune Disease Institute and the Program in Cellular
and Molecular Medicine at Children's Hospital Boston, was
published online on May 16 in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.
The microbicide takes advantage of a molecular phenomenon
called RNA interference (RNAi), in which small pieces of RNA
called small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) silence the expression
of individual genes with complementary sequences. Originally
observed in plants, RNAi was found to be active in mammals
only a decade ago, but it is already the focus of many clinical
investigations.
Lieberman and Wheeler chose to investigate RNAi's potential
to provide a molecular barrier against HIV transmission based
on earlier work in her laboratory showing that the phenomenon
could be harnessed to prevent herpes simplex virus (HSV) transmission,
and also on recent advances in understanding how HIV penetrates
the body. "The current model of HIV transmission holds
that the virus is localized to the genital tract for about
a week, which could provide a window of opportunity to intervene
and prevent the infection from establishing itself throughout
the body," said Lieberman. "And last year it was
shown that it is possible to prevent HIV transmission, at
least to some extent, with a topical vaginal agent using an
antiviral drug, thus providing proof-of-principle that a topical
strategy could interfere with virus transmission."
In the current study, the researchers used siRNAs that turned
off two viral genes and that of one of HIV's two host co-receptors,
CCR5. HIV uses CCR5, found on immune cells called T cells
and macrophages, to gain entry into an uninfected person's
immune cells and establish a foothold within the body. Individuals
harboring mutations that deactivate CCR5 are resistant to
infection with HIV.
To ensure that the siRNAs would be delivered only to the immune
cells targeted by HIV, the research team linked the siRNAs
to an aptamer -- a second piece of RNA designed to attach
to a specific molecule -- that binds to HIV's main receptor,
CD4, to create CD4 aptamer-siRNA chimeras (CD4-AsiCs).
"By using CD4 as a binding site but knocking down CCR5,
we get specificity for the cells targeted by HIV but avoid
the risk of interfering with the overall immune response,"
Lieberman noted.
When tested in vitro using cell lines and blood cells, the
CD4-AsiCs bound only to immune cells displaying CD4 on their
surface; turned off expression in those cells of the three
targeted genes; and prevented HIV replication. In addition,
CD4-AsiCs successfully penetrated cultured human cervicovaginal
tissues to reach immune cells deep within the tissue layers,
silence target gene expression, and prevent HIV infection
of the cultures.
To test the effectiveness of this system in vivo, the study
team applied CD4-AsiCs topically within the vaginal canal
of female mice with humanized immune systems, and then exposed
those mice intravaginally to HIV so as to mimic sexual transmission
of the virus. As in the in vitro model, the CD4-AsiCs were
able to penetrate through the vaginal walls of these mice
to the immune cells within the tissues, deliver the siRNAs
to cells displaying CD4, and turn off the expression of the
targeted genes. Over the following 12 weeks, none of the mice
treated with the siRNAs showed any biological signs of HIV
infection, while all of the control mice progressed to full-blown
HIV infection.
Lieberman thinks that the RNAi-based microbicide's specificity
and duration of action make it attractive for further pharmaceutical
development. "The problem with most topical methods for
preventing sexual transmission of disease is that you have
to use them just before having sex, and compliance is a huge
issue," she said. "But our laboratory results show
that we can knock down CCR5 expression potentially for weeks,
suggesting that we could create a stable viral-resistant state
where one would only have to apply the agent every couple
of weeks."
According to Wheeler, the method's modularity suggests that
its promise is not limited to HIV. "You could basically
switch in or out any kind of siRNA or aptamer for any binding
target to knock down any gene you would want, be it host or
viral." Lieberman added, "Conceivably, one could
include siRNAs against multiple viral agents in a cocktail
to gain protection from multiple sexually transmitted diseases,
including HSV and human papilloma virus."
Investigator affiliations: Immune Disease Institute and
Program in Cellular and Molecular Medicine, Children's Hospital
Boston, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA; Massachusetts
General Hospital, Boston, MA; Ragon Institute of MGH, MIT,
and Harvard, Boston, MA; Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston,
MA; Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Boston, MA; University
of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL.
5/20/11
Reference
LA
Wheeler, R Trifonova, V Vrbanac, et al. Inhibition of HIV
transmission in human cervicovaginal explants and humanized
mice using CD4 aptamer-siRNA chimeras. Journal of Clinical
Investigation (abstract).
May 16, 2011 (Epub ahead of print).
Other
Source
Children's Hospital Boston. Mouse Studies Point to Long-Lasting
Protection against HIV Infection Using Topical, RNAi-based
Microbicide. Press release. May 16, 2011.