scholarly journals Zinc-finger exercisesThe ‘cutting edge’ of gene therapy … literally

2008 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 10-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
David J. Segal

The traditional gene-therapy approach relies on the delivery of a therapeutic transgene into a cell, typically to compensate for a gene that is not functional owing to a genetic defect. But why not just correct the genetic defects directly? The answer used to be that there was no methodology for making precise genetic modifications in a highly efficient manner. That is changing now. Over the last decade, researchers have devised a way to stimulate the natural DNA-repair mechanisms of the cell to occur at any desired site in the genome. The enabling technological advance has been the development of programmable nucleases, which use re-engineered ZF (zinc-finger) DNA-binding domains to cut the DNA in a living cell at a precise user-defined location. These methods have been shown to produce genetic modifications at frequencies of >1 correct event per ten treated cells, representing a 100 000-fold stimulation of targeted gene repair. The first Phase I clinical trial of a therapeutic ZFN (zinc-finger nuclease) is scheduled for 2008.

2015 ◽  
Vol 116 (11) ◽  
pp. 2435-2444 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mir A. Hossain ◽  
Joeva J. Barrow ◽  
Yong Shen ◽  
MD Imdadul Haq ◽  
Jörg Bungert

2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-27 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Bach ◽  
William Sherman ◽  
Jani Pallis ◽  
Prabir Patra ◽  
Hassan Bajwa

Zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) are associated with cell death and apoptosis by binding at countless undesired locations. This cytotoxicity is associated with the binding ability of engineered zinc finger domains to bind dissimilar DNA sequences with high affinity. In general, binding preferences of transcription factors are associated with significant degenerated diversity and complexity which convolutes the design and engineering of precise DNA binding domains. Evolutionary success of natural zinc finger proteins, however, evinces that nature created specific evolutionary traits and strategies, such as modularity and rank-specific recognition to cope with binding complexity that are critical for creating clinical viable tools to precisely modify the human genome. Our findings indicate preservation of general modularity and significant alteration of the rank-specific binding preferences of the three-finger binding domain of transcription factor SP1 when exchanging amino acids in the 2nd finger.


Author(s):  
Mazen Hamed ◽  
Reema Siam ◽  
Roza Zaid

Zinc finger proteins (ZFP) play important roles in cellular processes. The DNA binding region of ZFP consists of 3 zinc finger DNA binding domains connected by amino acid linkers, the sequence TGQKP connects ZF1 and ZF2, and TGEKP connects ZF2 with ZF3. Linkers act to tune the zinc finger protein in the right position to bind its DNA target, the type of amino acid residues and length of linkers reflect on ZF1-ZF2-ZF3 interactions and contribute to the search and recognition process of ZF protein to its DNA target. Linker mutations and the affinity of the resulting mutants to specific and nonspecific DNA targets were studied by MD simulations and MM_GB(PB)SA. The affinity of mutants to DNA varied with type and position of amino acid residue. Mutation of K in TGQKP resulted in loss in affinity due to the loss of positive K interaction with phosphates, mutation of G showed loss in affinity to DNA, WT protein and all linker mutants showed loss in affinity to a nonspecific DNA target, this finding confirms previous reports which interpreted this loss in affinity as due to ZF1 having an anchoring role, and ZF3 playing an explorer role in the binding mechanism. The change in ZFP-DNA affinity with linker mutations is discussed in view of protein structure and role of linker residues in binding.


Nature ◽  
1991 ◽  
Vol 349 (6305) ◽  
pp. 175-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jeannette Nardelli ◽  
Toby J. Gibson ◽  
Christine Vesque ◽  
Patrick Charnay

BMC Genomics ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 659 ◽  
Author(s):  
Justin E Dalton ◽  
Justin M Fear ◽  
Simon Knott ◽  
Bruce S Baker ◽  
Lauren M McIntyre ◽  
...  

Genetics ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 165 (2) ◽  
pp. 575-588 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tetsunari Fukushige ◽  
Barbara Goszczynski ◽  
Helen Tian ◽  
James D McGhee

Abstract We describe the elt-4 gene from the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans. elt-4 is predicted to encode a very small (72 residues, 8.1 kD) GATA-type zinc finger transcription factor. The elt-4 gene is located ∼5 kb upstream of the C. elegans elt-2 gene, which also encodes a GATA-type transcription factor; the zinc finger DNA-binding domains are highly conserved (24/25 residues) between the two proteins. The elt-2 gene is expressed only in the intestine and is essential for normal intestinal development. This article explores whether elt-4 also has a role in intestinal development. Reporter fusions to the elt-4 promoter or reporter insertions into the elt-4 coding regions show that elt-4 is indeed expressed in the intestine, beginning at the 1.5-fold stage of embryogenesis and continuing into adulthood. elt-4 reporter fusions are also expressed in nine cells of the posterior pharynx. Ectopic expression of elt-4 cDNA within the embryo does not cause detectable ectopic expression of biochemical markers of gut differentiation; furthermore, ectopic elt-4 expression neither inhibits nor enhances the ectopic marker expression caused by ectopic elt-2 expression. A deletion allele of elt-4 was isolated but no obvious phenotype could be detected, either in the gut or elsewhere; brood sizes, hatching efficiencies, and growth rates were indistinguishable from wild type. We found no evidence that elt-4 provided backup functions for elt-2. We used microarray analysis to search for genes that might be differentially expressed between L1 larvae of the elt-4 deletion strain and wild-type worms. Paired hybridizations were repeated seven times, allowing us to conclude, with some confidence, that no candidate target transcript could be identified as significantly up- or downregulated by loss of elt-4 function. In vitro binding experiments could not detect specific binding of ELT-4 protein to candidate binding sites (double-stranded oligonucleotides containing single or multiple WGATAR sequences); ELT-4 protein neither enhanced nor inhibited the strong sequence-specific binding of the ELT-2 protein. Whereas ELT-2 protein is a strong transcriptional activator in yeast, ELT-4 protein has no such activity under similar conditions, nor does it influence the transcriptional activity of coexpressed ELT-2 protein. Although an elt-2 homolog was easily identified in the genomic sequence of the related nematode C. briggsae, no elt-4 homolog could be identified. Analysis of the changes in silent third codon positions within the DNA-binding domains indicates that elt-4 arose as a duplication of elt-2, some 25–55 MYA. Thus, elt-4 has survived far longer than the average duplicated gene in C. elegans, even though no obvious biological function could be detected. elt-4 provides an interesting example of a tandemly duplicated gene that may originally have been the same size as elt-2 but has gradually been whittled down to its present size of little more than a zinc finger. Although elt-4 must confer (or must have conferred) some selective advantage to C. elegans, we suggest that its ultimate evolutionary fate will be disappearance from the C. elegans genome.


1995 ◽  
Vol 14 (11) ◽  
pp. 971-981 ◽  
Author(s):  
RITA LANGE ◽  
ANNETTE CHRISTOPH ◽  
HANS-JÜRGEN THIESEN ◽  
GABY VOPPER ◽  
KENNETH R. JOHNSON ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document