Molecular Therapy: Methods & Clinical Development (Jun 2018)

Engineering PTEN-L for Cell-Mediated Delivery

  • Sylvie J. Lavictoire,
  • Alexander Gont,
  • Lisa M. Julian,
  • William L. Stanford,
  • Caitlyn Vlasschaert,
  • Douglas A. Gray,
  • Danny Jomaa,
  • Ian A.J. Lorimer

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
pp. 12 – 22

Abstract

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The tumor suppressor PTEN is frequently inactivated in glioblastoma. PTEN-L is a long form of PTEN produced by translation from an alternate upstream start codon. Unlike PTEN, PTEN-L has a signal sequence and a tract of six arginine residues that allow PTEN-L to be secreted from cells and be taken up by neighboring cells. This suggests that PTEN-L could be used as a therapeutic to restore PTEN activity. However, effective delivery of therapeutic proteins to treat CNS cancers such as glioblastoma is challenging. One method under evaluation is cell-mediated therapy, where cells with tumor-homing abilities such as neural stem cells are genetically modified to express a therapeutic protein. Here, we have developed a version of PTEN-L that is engineered for enhanced cell-mediated delivery. This was accomplished by replacement of the native leader sequence of PTEN-L with a leader sequence from human light-chain immunoglobulin G (IgG). This version of PTEN-L showed increased secretion and an increased ability to transfer to neighboring cells. Neural stem cells derived from human fibroblasts could be modified to express this version of PTEN-L and were able to deliver catalytically active light-chain leader PTEN-L (lclPTEN-L) to neighboring glioblastoma cells. Keywords: PTEN, PTEN-L, glioblastoma, cell-mediated therapy, signal sequence, neural stem cell