Gene therapy for acute lung injury

被引:0
|
作者
K. L. Brigham
A. A. Stecenko
机构
[1] Center for Lung Research,
[2] Vanderbilt University School of Medicine,undefined
[3] Nashville,undefined
[4] Tennessee,undefined
[5] USA 37232 Tel.:(615) 322–3412 Fax: (6 15) 343–7448,undefined
来源
Intensive Care Medicine | 2000年 / 26卷
关键词
Cystic Fibrosis; Gene Therapy; Pulmonary Hypertension; PGE2; Acute Lung Injury;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The remarkable transition of biological science into the age of molecular biology held great promise for development of new therapies for treatment of human disease. The fact that the technology exists for analyzing genetic material in exquisite detail and constructing DNA in virtually any desired form was the basis for promising rapid translation into clinical medicine and the final cure for genetically determined diseases; cystic fibrosis is the prime example of such a lung disease. The promise was not kept, at least not in a time frame which was expected. That result is neither because the rationale was faulty nor because the tools of molecular biology were wanting. The devil was and is in the details. How do you deliver DNA to the desired cell targets in amounts sufficient to accomplish the desired effect? Viral vectors have received the most attention, but viral vectors have proven to have both theoretical and practical problems. In the lungs, these vectors have not fulfilled their original promise. Non-viral based strategies work in a general sense, but efficiency of gene delivery in vivo has been a limitation. In addition, the experimental end points in both clinical and preclinical investigation have been most often designed to demonstrate phenomenology rather than potential efficacy. And, why limit the potential of gene therapy to inherited disease? In fact, treatment of acquired diseases by increasing or decreasing expression of a given gene in the lungs that would hasten recovery from an acquired disease might be easier than treating inherited disease because the requirements for duration of transgene expression would be less stringent. Over the past two decades, we have learned enough about the pathogenesis of acute lung injury to predict that increased (or decreased) production of certain biologically active mediators should be beneficial. Genes encoding some of these mediators have been cloned and constructs made which express the genes. It is now possible using either viral or non-viral strategies to deliver expression constructs to the lungs and, since acute lung injury has a dismal prognosis and no effective drugs have been identified, this seems a good clinical target for gene therapy. In preclinical studies, we have shown that increased expression of the gene encoding the constitutive form of the cyclooxygenase gene (COX-1) results in increased production of prostacyclin and PGE2 by the lungs and inhibits endotoxin induced pulmonary hypertension and edema. Additional studies demonstrate that increased expression of the alpha-1 antitrypsin gene in human respiratory epithelium in culture and in vivo has anti-viral and anti-inflammatory effects that are not predicted by extracellular concentrations of the transgene product. Thus, acute lung injury is a reasonable target for gene therapy, and evidence to date indicates that current technology is sufficiently robust to pursue this novel area for treatment of this devastating disease.
引用
收藏
页码:S119 / S123
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Gene therapy for acute lung injury
    Brigham, KL
    Stecenko, AA
    INTENSIVE CARE MEDICINE, 2000, 26 (Suppl 1) : S119 - S123
  • [2] PROSPECTS FOR GENE-THERAPY IN ACUTE LUNG INJURY
    HAZINSKI, TA
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF THE MEDICAL SCIENCES, 1992, 304 (02) : 131 - 135
  • [3] Gene delivery based on non-viral vector for therapy of acute lung injury
    Zhang, Jian
    Wang, Tingting
    Zheng, Rui
    Wang, Xingxing
    PROCESS BIOCHEMISTRY, 2023, 124 : 44 - 50
  • [4] Polyethyleneimine and DNA nanoparticles-based gene therapy for acute lung injury
    Lin, Erh-Hsuan
    Chang, Hsiang-Yi
    Yeh, Shauh-Der
    Yang, Kuang-Yao
    Hu, Huei-Sin
    Wu, Cheng-Wen
    NANOMEDICINE-NANOTECHNOLOGY BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE, 2013, 9 (08) : 1293 - 1303
  • [5] Molybdenum Nanodots for Acute Lung Injury Therapy
    Yan, Jiayang
    Tang, Zhongmin
    Li, Yanan
    Wang, Han
    Hsu, Jessica C.
    Shi, Mengmeng
    Fu, Zi
    Ji, Xiuru
    Cai, Weibo
    Ni, Dalong
    Qu, Jieming
    ACS NANO, 2023, 17 (23) : 23872 - 23888
  • [6] Anticoagulant therapy for acute lung injury or pneumonia
    Schultz, MJ
    Levi, M
    van der Poll, T
    CURRENT DRUG TARGETS, 2003, 4 (04) : 315 - 321
  • [7] Science review: Searching for gene candidates in acute lung injury
    Dmitry N Grigoryev
    James H Finigan
    Paul Hassoun
    Joe GN Garcia
    Critical Care, 8
  • [8] Lung microvascular pressure profile in acute lung injury
    Nagasaka, Y
    Ishigaki, M
    Hazu, R
    Okazaki, H
    Matsuda, M
    Huang, J
    Fujita, E
    Ohya, N
    Nakajima, S
    TOHOKU JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL MEDICINE, 1996, 179 (02) : 81 - 92
  • [9] Science review: Searching for gene candidates in acute lung injury
    Grigoryev, DN
    Finigan, JH
    Hassoun, P
    Garcia, JGN
    CRITICAL CARE, 2004, 8 (06): : 440 - 447
  • [10] Surfactant therapy in adults with acute lung injury/acute respiratory distress syndrome
    Kesecioglu, J
    Haitsma, JJ
    CURRENT OPINION IN CRITICAL CARE, 2006, 12 (01) : 55 - 60