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Possible biomedical applications of environmental biotechnology no kidding

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Title: Possible biomedical applications of environmental biotechnology no kidding


1
Possible biomedical applications of environmental
biotechnology -- no kidding! Aubrey D.N.J. de
Grey Department of Genetics, University of
Cambridge Email ag24_at_gen.cam.ac.uk Website
http//www.sens.org/
2
Acknowledgements Preliminary data John Archer
(Cambridge), Ulf Brunk (Linköping) More recent
data John Schloendorn and colleagues (ASU),
Jacques Matthieu (Rice) Microbiology Bruce
Rittmann (Northwestern/ASU), Perry McCarty
(Stanford), Pedro Alvarez (Rice) Enzyme delivery
Ana Maria Cuervo (Albert Einstein), Roscoe
Brady (NINDS) Biomedical applications Ralph
Nixon (NYU), Jay Jerome (Vanderbilt), Janet
Sparrow (Columbia)
3
  • Structure of this talk
  • Age-related intracellular aggregates and the
    evidence for their pathogenicity
  • Bioremediation meets biomedicine
  • Efficacy in principle
  • Delivery
  • Safety

4
  • Structure of this talk
  • Age-related intracellular aggregates and the
    evidence for their pathogenicity
  • Bioremediation meets biomedicine
  • Efficacy in principle
  • Delivery
  • Safety

5
Aggregates three major examples - A2E in macular
degeneration - Proteins in neurodegeneration -
Oxysterols in atherosclerosis
6
Aggregates three major examples - A2E in macular
degeneration - Proteins in neurodegeneration -
Oxysterols in atherosclerosis
7
Age-related accumulation of fluorescent compounds
in retinal pigment epithelium
neural retina
RPE
8
Fundus autofluorescence (RPE lipofuscin)
increases with age
Exc. 550 nm
normal eyes 7 temporal to the fovea
Individually corrected for lens absorption
Delori et al., IOVS 421855. 2001
MOD FA
9
RPE lipofuscin forms in photoreceptor outer
segments as a byproduct of the retinoid cycle
opsin
11-cis-retinal (vitamin A derivative)
visual cycle
lipofuscin fluorophores
10
Amphiphilic compound
2 hydrophobic side-arms
cationic polar head
Cl -
iso-A2E
A2E
detergent-like activity
11
Detecting A2E-epoxides by mass spectroscopy
A2E bis-epoxide
A2E
624
640
A2E nona-epoxide
608
656
672
FAB-MS
592
688
16
704
720
736
12
oxidation of DNA bases
modifications of protein
changes in gene expression
apoptosis
13
Aggregates three major examples - A2E in macular
degeneration - Proteins in neurodegeneration -
Oxysterols in atherosclerosis
14
Autophagy in Alzheimers Disease
Dystrophic Neurites
IEM
Calnexin
Cat D
15
Autophagy in Dystrophic Neurites
Autophagosomes pH 7.4
Autophagolysosomes LEP100 pH lt 6.7
Dystrophic Neurite
Lysosomes
16
  • Can lysosomal accumulation of anything possibly
    be beneficial?
  • Model 1 aggregation of misfolded proteins is bad
    (prevents their digestion by cytosolic proteases
    or chaperone-mediated autophagy)
  • Inference lysosomal aggregates result from
    macro- or microautophagy of cytosolic aggregates
    followed by failure of their lysosomal
    proteolysis
  • Thus intralysosomal accumulation is bad

17
  • Can lysosomal accumulation of anything possibly
    be beneficial?
  • Model 2 aggregation of misfolded proteins is
    good, as a staging-post when their proteolysis is
    failing aggregates are autophagocytosed when
    possible
  • Inference lysosomal aggregates result from CM-,
    macro- or microautophagy of cytosolic proteins
    followed by failure of their lysosomal
    proteolysis
  • Thus intralysosomal accumulation is bad

18
  • Can lysosomal accumulation of anything possibly
    be beneficial?
  • Model 3 aggregation of misfolded proteins is
    good, because aggregates nucleate more misfolded
    proteins and thus clear them faster
  • Inference lysosomal aggregates result from CM-,
    macro- or microautophagy of other molecules,
    which cause failure of lysosomal proteolysis
  • Thus intralysosomal accumulation is bad

19
  • Can lysosomal accumulation of anything possibly
    be beneficial?
  • Nothing that gets into lysosomes gets out again
  • Lysosomal aggregates are biochemically inert

Thus intralysosomal accumulation is bad
20
Aggregates three major examples - A2E in macular
degeneration - Proteins in neurodegeneration -
Oxysterols in atherosclerosis
21
Atherosclerosis Progression
22
Atherosclerotic Lesion
23
Foam Cell Formed by Receptor-Mediated
internalization of Low Density Lipoproteins (LDL).
LDL
24
LDL
25
LIPOPROTEIN
Chol-E
Endocytosis
LYSOSOME/LATE ENDOSOME
Chol-E
LAL
Chol-E
Chol FA
FA
Plasma Membrane
ACAT
Chol-E
Chol
Chol
NCEH
Cholesterol Efflux Promoter
26
Atherosclerotic Lesion Composition
Monocytes
Endothelium
Lipoprotein
Macrophage Foam Cell
Smooth Muscle
Primary lipid in lesion is Cholesterol and
Cholesteryl Esters
27
Endothelial Cells
Lipid-engorged Lysosome
Foam Cell
28
OxLDL-treated Human Macrophages accumulate FC and
CE in lysosomes
Acid Phosphatase Stained
29
Known effects of Oxidation of LDL on Lysosomal
Function
  • Heavily oxidized LDL will directly inhibit
    cathepsins and lipases.
  • However, does not produce cellular cholesterol
    accumulation because cholesterol converted to
    oxysterol
  • Heavily oxidized LDL is cytotoxic
  • Modestly oxidized LDL promotes lysosomal
    cholesterol accumulation.

30
Possible Lipid-Induced alterations in Lysosomes
  • Direct inhibition of enzymes
  • Inhibition of delivery of enzyme to lysosome
  • No inhibition of delivery of endocytosed
    lipoprotein
  • Some evidence of disruption of trafficking
    between lysosomes and TGN
  • Alteration in the lysosomal environment

31
  • Structure of this talk
  • Age-related intracellular aggregates and the
    evidence for their pathogenicity
  • Bioremediation meets biomedicine
  • Efficacy in principle
  • Delivery
  • Safety

32
  • Bioremediation the concept
  • - Microbes, like all life, need an ecological
    niche
  • - Some get it by brawn (growing very fast)
  • - Some by brain (living off material than others
    can't)
  • Any abundant, energy-rich organic material that
    is hard to degrade thus provides selective
    pressure to evolve the machinery to degrade it
  • - That selective pressure works. Even TNT, PCBs

33
Example DGGE Results from Perchlorate-Reducing,
Membrane Biofilm Reactors
34
Xenocatabolism the concept Graveyards -
are abundant in human remains - accumulate
bones (which are not energy-rich) - do not
accumulate oxysterols, A2E etc... - so,
should harbour microbes that degrade them -
whose catabolic enzymes could be therapeutic
35
Environmental decontamination in vivo
36
  • Steps to biomedical application
  • Isolate competent strains select by starvation
  • Identify the enzymes (mutagenesis, chemistry,
    genomics)
  • Make lysosome-targeted transgenes, assay cell
    toxicity
  • Assay competence in vitro (more
    mutagenesis/selection)
  • Construct transgenic mice, assay toxicity in vivo
  • Assay competence in disease mouse models
  • Test in humans as for lysosomal storage diseases

37
  • Structure of this talk
  • Age-related intracellular aggregates and the
    evidence for their pathogenicity
  • Bioremediation meets biomedicine
  • Efficacy in principle
  • Delivery
  • Safety

38
This might just work preliminary data
39
This might just work preliminary data
40
7-ketocholesterol degradation - a promising start
41
Identifying the genes - first steps
42
  • Other major efficacy issues
  • - How many enzymes would we need?
  • Maybe not many LSDs (single-gene disorders)
    imply big synergy between the various enzymes
  • - How could we make them work in mammals?
  • LacZ does but also, in vitro evolution fungi
  • What about low-abundance lysosomal toxins?
  • Abundance is presumably not that low

43
  • Structure of this talk
  • Age-related intracellular aggregates and the
    evidence for their pathogenicity
  • Bioremediation meets biomedicine
  • Efficacy in principle
  • Delivery
  • Safety

44
  • How can we get these enzymes to lysosomes of
    affected cells?
  • Gene therapy
  • Stem cell therapy
  • Enzyme therapy

45
Main Trafficking Pathways
Vesicular Traffic
Chaperone-mediated Autophagy
CVT Macroautophagy
Modified from Alberts 2002
46
  • How can we get these enzymes to lysosomes of
    affected cells?
  • Gene therapy
  • Stem cell therapy
  • Enzyme therapy

47
Amino Acid Chain
48
(No Transcript)
49
Amino Acid Chain
50
  • Structure of this talk
  • Age-related intracellular aggregates and the
    evidence for their pathogenicity
  • Bioremediation meets biomedicine
  • Efficacy in principle
  • Delivery
  • Safety

51
  • Safety the main issues
  • Immunogenicity?
  • Tolerisation brief expression low expression
  • Extralysosomal toxicity?
  • Specificity coding as proenzymes try again!

52
  • Conclusions
  • Disparate areas of biology can converge (if
    anyone has time to spot the link!)
  • We need to try radical approaches
  • This might just work..
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