Title: Possible biomedical applications of environmental biotechnology no kidding
1Possible 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/
2Acknowledgements 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
5Aggregates three major examples - A2E in macular
degeneration - Proteins in neurodegeneration -
Oxysterols in atherosclerosis
6Aggregates three major examples - A2E in macular
degeneration - Proteins in neurodegeneration -
Oxysterols in atherosclerosis
7Age-related accumulation of fluorescent compounds
in retinal pigment epithelium
neural retina
RPE
8Fundus 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
9RPE lipofuscin forms in photoreceptor outer
segments as a byproduct of the retinoid cycle
opsin
11-cis-retinal (vitamin A derivative)
visual cycle
lipofuscin fluorophores
10Amphiphilic compound
2 hydrophobic side-arms
cationic polar head
Cl -
iso-A2E
A2E
detergent-like activity
11Detecting 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
12oxidation of DNA bases
modifications of protein
changes in gene expression
apoptosis
13Aggregates three major examples - A2E in macular
degeneration - Proteins in neurodegeneration -
Oxysterols in atherosclerosis
14Autophagy in Alzheimers Disease
Dystrophic Neurites
IEM
Calnexin
Cat D
15Autophagy 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
20Aggregates three major examples - A2E in macular
degeneration - Proteins in neurodegeneration -
Oxysterols in atherosclerosis
21Atherosclerosis Progression
22Atherosclerotic Lesion
23Foam Cell Formed by Receptor-Mediated
internalization of Low Density Lipoproteins (LDL).
LDL
24LDL
25LIPOPROTEIN
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
26Atherosclerotic Lesion Composition
Monocytes
Endothelium
Lipoprotein
Macrophage Foam Cell
Smooth Muscle
Primary lipid in lesion is Cholesterol and
Cholesteryl Esters
27Endothelial Cells
Lipid-engorged Lysosome
Foam Cell
28OxLDL-treated Human Macrophages accumulate FC and
CE in lysosomes
Acid Phosphatase Stained
29Known 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.
30Possible 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
33Example DGGE Results from Perchlorate-Reducing,
Membrane Biofilm Reactors
34Xenocatabolism 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
35Environmental 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
38This might just work preliminary data
39This might just work preliminary data
407-ketocholesterol degradation - a promising start
41Identifying 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
45Main 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..