Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development (Jun 2018)

Target-Cell-Directed Bioengineering Approaches for Gene Therapy of Hemophilia A

  • Harrison C. Brown,
  • Philip M. Zakas,
  • Stephan N. George,
  • Ernest T. Parker,
  • H. Trent Spencer,
  • Christopher B. Doering

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
pp. 57 – 69

Abstract

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Potency is a key optimization parameter for hemophilia A gene therapy product candidates. Optimization strategies include promoter engineering to increase transcription, codon optimization of mRNA to improve translation, and amino-acid substitution to promote secretion. Herein, we describe both rational and empirical design approaches to the development of a minimally sized, highly potent AAV-fVIII vector that incorporates three unique elements: a liver-directed 146-nt transcription regulatory module, a target-cell-specific codon optimization algorithm, and a high-expression bioengineered fVIII variant. The minimal synthetic promoter allows for the smallest AAV-fVIII vector genome known at 4,832 nt, while the tissue-directed codon optimization strategy facilitates increased fVIII transgene product expression in target cell types, e.g., hepatocytes, over traditional genome-level codon optimization strategies. As a tertiary approach, we incorporated ancient and orthologous fVIII sequence elements previously shown to facilitate improved biosynthesis through post-translational mechanisms. Together, these technologies contribute to an AAV-fVIII vector that confers sustained, curative levels of fVIII at a minimal dose in hemophilia A mice. Moreover, the first two technologies should be generalizable to all liver-directed gene therapy vector designs. Keywords: vector optimization, AAV, hemophilia, factor VIII, codon optimization, promoter design