Sensor Could Detect Viruses, Kill Cancer Cells
Sensor Could Detect Viruses, Kill
Cancer Cells
This system can be customized to
detect any DNA sequence in a mammalian cell and then trigger a desired response,
including killing cancer cells or cells infected with a virus, the researchers
say.
"There is a range of
applications for which this could be important," says James Collins, the
Termeer Professor of Medical Engineering and Science in MIT's Department of
Biological Engineering and Institute of Medical Engineering and Science (IMES).
"This allows you to readily design constructs that enable a programmed
cell to both detect DNA and act on that detection, with a report system and/or
a respond system."
Collins is the senior author of a
Sept. 21 Nature Methods paper describing the technology, which is based on a
type of DNA-binding proteins known as zinc fingers. These proteins can be
designed to recognize any DNA sequence.
"The technologies are out
there to engineer proteins to bind to virtually any DNA sequence that you
want," says Shimyn Slomovic, an IMES postdoc and the paper's lead author.
"This is used in many ways, but not so much for detection. We felt that
there was a lot of potential in harnessing this designable DNA-binding
technology for detection."
Sense and respond
To create their new system, the
researchers needed to link zinc fingers' DNA-binding capability with a
consequence -- either turning on a fluorescent protein to reveal that the
target DNA is present or generating another type of action inside the cell.
The researchers achieved this by
exploiting a type of protein known as an "intein" -- a short protein
that can be inserted into a larger protein, splitting it into two pieces. The
split protein pieces, known as "exteins," only become functional once
the intein removes itself while rejoining the two halves.
Collins and Slomovic decided to
divide an intein in two and then attach each portion to a split extein half and
a zinc finger protein. The zinc finger proteins are engineered to recognize
adjacent DNA sequences within the targeted gene, so if they both find their
sequences, the inteins line up and are then cut out, allowing the extein halves
to rejoin and form a functional protein. The extein protein is a transcription
factor designed to turn on any gene the researchers want.
In this paper, they linked green
fluorescent protein (GFP) production to the zinc fingers' recognition of a DNA
sequence from an adenovirus, so that any cell infected with this virus would
glow green.
This approach could be used not
only to reveal infected cells, but also to kill them. To achieve this, the
researchers could program the system to produce proteins that alert immune
cells to fight the infection, instead of GFP.
"Since this is modular, you
can potentially evoke any response that you want," Slomovic says.
"You could program the cell to kill itself, or to secrete proteins that
would allow the immune system to identify it as an enemy cell so the immune
system would take care of it."
The MIT researchers also deployed
this system to kill cells by linking detection of the DNA target to production
of an enzyme called NTR. This enzyme activates a harmless drug precursor called
CB 1954, which the researchers added to the petri dish where the cells were
growing. When activated by NTR, CB 1954 kills the cells.
Future versions of the system
could be designed to bind to DNA sequences found in cancerous genes and then
produce transcription factors that would activate the cells' own programmed
cell death pathways.
Research tool
The researchers are now adapting
this system to detect latent HIV proviruses, which remain dormant in some
infected cells even after treatment. Learning more about such viruses could
help scientists find ways to permanently eliminate them.
"Latent HIV provirus is
pretty much the final barrier to curing AIDS, which currently is incurable
simply because the provirus sequence is there, dormant, and there aren't any
ways to eradicate it," Slomovic says.
While treating diseases using
this system is likely many years away, it could be used much sooner as a
research tool, Collins says. For example, scientists could use it to test
whether genetic material has been successfully delivered to cells that
scientists are trying to genetically alter. Cells that did not receive the new
gene could be induced to undergo cell death, creating a pure population of the
desired cells.
It could also be used to study
chromosomal inversions and transpositions that occur in cancer cells, or to
study the 3-D structure of normal chromosomes by testing whether two genes
located far from each other on a chromosome fold in such a way that they end up
next to each other, the researchers say.