Expression of ΔF508 CFTR in normal mouse lung after site-specific modification of CFTR sequences by SFHR

KK Goncz, A Colosimo, B Dallapiccola, L Gagne… - Gene therapy, 2001 - nature.com
KK Goncz, A Colosimo, B Dallapiccola, L Gagne, K Hong, G Novelli, D Papahadjopoulos…
Gene therapy, 2001nature.com
The development of gene targeting strategies for specific modification of genomic DNA in
human somatic cells has provided a potential gene therapy for the treatment of inherited
diseases. One approach, small fragment homologous replacement (SFHR), directly targets
and modifies specific genomic sequences with small fragments of exogenous DNA (400–
800 bp) that are homologous to genomic sequences except for the desired modification.
This approach has been effective for the in vitro modification of exon 10 in the cystic fibrosis …
Abstract
The development of gene targeting strategies for specific modification of genomic DNA in human somatic cells has provided a potential gene therapy for the treatment of inherited diseases. One approach, small fragment homologous replacement (SFHR), directly targets and modifies specific genomic sequences with small fragments of exogenous DNA (400–800 bp) that are homologous to genomic sequences except for the desired modification. This approach has been effective for the in vitro modification of exon 10 in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) gene in human airway epithelial cells. As another step in the development of SFHR for gene therapy, studies were carried out to target and modify specific genomic sequences in exon 10 of the mouse CFTR (mCFTR) in vivo. Small DNA fragments (783 bp), homologous to mCFTR except for a 3-bp deletion (ΔF508) and a silent mutation which introduces a unique restriction site (KpnI), were instilled into the lungs of normal mice using four different DNA vehicles (AVE, LipofectAMINE, DDAB, SuperFect). Successful modification was determined by PCR amplification of DNA or mRNA-derived cDNA followed by KpnI digestion. The results of these studies showed that SFHR can be used as a gene therapy to introduce specific modifications into the cells of clinically affected organs and that the cells will express the new sequence.
nature.com