An artificial intelligence program may enable the first simple production of customizable proteins called zinc fingers to treat diseases by turning genes on and off. The researchers who designed the tool say it promises to accelerate the development of gene therapies on a large scale
From: NYU Langone Health / NYU Grossman School of
Medicine
January 26, 2023 -- The
researchers at NYU Grossman School of Medicine and the University of Toronto
who designed the tool say it promises to accelerate the development of gene
therapies on a large scale.
Illnesses including
cystic fibrosis, Tay-Sachs disease, and sickle cell anemia are caused by errors
in the order of DNA letters that encode the operating instructions for every
human cell. Scientists can in some cases correct these mistakes with gene
editing methods that rearrange these letters.
Other conditions are
caused, not by a mistake in the code itself, but by problems in how the
cellular machinery reads DNA (epigenetics). A gene, which provides the recipe
for a particular protein, often partners with molecules called transcription
factors that tell the cell how much of that protein to make. When this process
goes awry, over- or underactive genes contribute to diabetes, cancer, and
neurological disorders. As a result, researchers have been exploring ways to
restore normal epigenetic activity.
One such technique is
zinc-finger editing, which can both change and control genes. Among the most
abundant protein structures in the human body, zinc fingers can guide DNA
repair by grabbing onto scissor-like enzymes and directing them to cut faulty
segments out of the code.
Similarly, zinc fingers
can also hook onto transcription factors and pull them toward a gene segment in
need of regulation. By customizing these instructions, genetic engineers can
tailor any gene's activity. A drawback, however, is that artificial zinc
fingers are challenging to design for a specific task. Since these proteins
attach to DNA in complex groups, researchers would need to be able to tell --
out of countless possible combinations -- how every zinc finger interacts with
its neighbor for each desired genetic change.
The study authors' new
technology, called ZFDesign, overcomes this obstacle by using artificial
intelligence (AI) to model and design these interactions. The model is based on
data generated by the screen of nearly 50 billion possible zinc finger-DNA
interactions in the researchers' labs. A report on the tool is publishing
online Jan. 26 in the journal Nature Biotechnology.
"Our program can
identify the right grouping of zinc fingers for any modification, making this
type of gene editing faster than ever before," says study lead author
David Ichikawa, PhD, a former graduate student at NYU Langone Health.
Ichikawa notes that
zinc-finger editing offers a potentially safer alternative to CRISPR, a key
gene-editing technology with applications that range from finding new ways to
kill cancer cells to designing more nourishing crops. Unlike the entirely
human-derived zinc fingers, CRISPR, which stands for clustered regularly
interspaced short palindromic repeat, relies on bacterial proteins to interact
with genetic code. These "foreign" proteins could trigger patients'
immune defense systems, which may attack them like any other infection and lead
to dangerous inflammation.
The study authors add
that besides posing a lower immune risk, the small size of zinc-finger tools
may also provide more flexible gene therapy techniques compared with CRISPR by
enabling more ways to deliver the tools to the right cells in patients.
"By speeding up
zinc-finger design coupled with their smaller size, our system paves the way
for using these proteins to control multiple genes at the same time," says
study senior author Marcus Noyes, PhD. "In the future, this approach may
help correct diseases that have multiple genetic causes, such as heart disease,
obesity, and many cases of autism."
To test the computer's
AI design code, Noyes and his team used a customized zinc finger to disrupt the
coding sequence of a gene in human cells. In addition, they built several zinc
fingers that successfully reprogrammed transcription factors to bind near a
target gene sequence and turn up or down its expression, demonstrating that
their technology can be used for epigenetic changes.
Noyes, an assistant
professor in the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Pharmacology at NYU
Langone, cautions that, while promising, zinc fingers can be difficult to
control. Since they are not always specific to a single gene, some combinations
can affect DNA sequences beyond a particular target, leading to unintended
changes in genetic code.
As a result, Noyes says
the team next plans to refine their AI program so it can build more precise
zinc-finger groupings that only prompt the desired edit. Noyes is also a member
of NYU Langone's Institute for System Genetics.
Funding for the study
was provided by National Institutes of Health grants R01GM118851 and
R01GM133936. Further funding was provided by Canadian Institutes of Health
Research Project grant PJT-159750, the Compute Canada Resource Allocation, the
Frederick Banting and Charles Best Canada Graduate Scholarship, and the Ontario
Graduate Scholarship.
Noyes is a co-founder
of TBG Therapeutics, a company that develops methods to design zinc fingers and
apply them to treatments for diseases with genetic components. NYU Langone has
patents pending (PCT/US21/30267, 63145929) for these tools and approaches, from
which both Noyes and NYU Langone may benefit financially. The terms and
conditions of these relationships are being managed in accordance with the
policies of NYU Langone.
In addition to Noyes,
other NYU investigators involved in the study were Manjunatha Kogenaru, PhD;
April Mueller, BS; David Giganti, PhD; Gregory Goldberg, PhD; Samantha Adams,
PhD; Jeffrey Spencer, PhD; Courtney Gianco; Finnegan Clark, BS; and Timothee
Lionnet, PhD. Other study investigators included Osama Abdin, BS; Nader
Alerasool, PhD; Han Wen, MS; Rozita Razavi, PhD, MPH; Satra Nim, PhD; Hong
Zheng, PhD; Mikko Taipale, PhD; and Philip Kim, PhD, at the University of
Toronto. Study lead author David Ichikawa is at the Pandemic Response Lab in
Long Island City, N.Y.
New AI
tool makes speedy gene-editing possible -- ScienceDaily
No comments:
Post a Comment