Eidelman O, Srivastava M, Zhang J, Leighton X, Murtie J, Jozwik C, Jacobson K, Weinstein D L, Metcalf E L, Pollard H B
Department of Anatomy, Institute of Molecular Medicine F. Edward Hebert School of Medicine, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland 20814, USA.
Mol Med. 2001 Aug;7(8):523-34.
Cystic fibrosis (CF) is the most common, lethal autosomal recessive disease affecting children in the United States and Europe. Extensive work is being performed to develop both gene and drug therapies. The principal mutation causing CF is in the CFTR gene ([Delta F508]CFTR). This mutation causes the mutant protein to traffic poorly to the plasma membrane, and degrades CFTR chloride channel activity. CPX, a candidate drug for CF, binds to mutant CFTR and corrects the trafficking deficit. CPX also activates mutant CFTR chloride channel activity. CF airways are phenotypically inundated by inflammatory signals, primarily contributed by sustained secretion of the proinflammatory cytokine interleukin 8 (IL-8) from mutant CFTR airway epithelial cells. IL-8 production is controlled by genes from the TNF-alphaR/NFkappaB pathway, and it is possible that the CF phenotype is due to dysfunction of genes from this pathway. In addition, because drug therapy with CPX and gene therapy with CFTR have the same common endpoint of raising the levels of CFTR, we have hypothesized that either approach should have a common genomic endpoint.
To test this hypothesis, we studied IL-8 secretion and global gene expression in IB-3 CF lung epithelial cells. The cells were treated by either gene therapy with wild-type CFTR, or by pharmacotherapy with the CFTR-surrogate drug CPX. CF cells, treated with either CFTR or CPX, were also exposed to Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a common chronic pathogen in CF patients. cDNA microarrays were used to assess global gene expression under the different conditions. A novel bioinformatic algorithm (GENESAVER) was developed to identify genes whose expression paralleled secretion of IL-8.
We report here that IB3 CF cells secrete massive levels of IL-8. However, both gene therapy with CFTR and drug therapy with CPX substantially suppress IL-8 secretion. Nonetheless, both gene and drug therapy allow the CF cells to respond with physiologic secretion of IL-8 when the cells are exposed to P. aeruginosa. Thus, neither CFTR nor CPX acts as a nonspecific suppressor of IL-8 secretion from CF cells. Consistently, pharmacogenomic analysis indicates that CF cells treated with CPX greatly resemble CF cells treated with CFTR by gene therapy. Additionally, the same result obtains in the presence of P. aeruginosa. Classical hierarchical cluster analysis, based on similarity of global gene expression, also supports this conclusion. The GENESAVER algorithm, using the IL-8 secretion level as a physiologic variable, identifies a subset of genes from the TNF-alphaR/NFkappaB pathway that is expressed in phase with IL-8 secretion from CF epithelial cells. Certain other genes, previously known to be positively associated with CF, also fall into this category. Identified genes known to code for known inhibitors are expressed inversely, out of phase with IL-8 secretion.
Wild-type CFTR and CPX both suppress proinflammatory IL-8 secretion from CF epithelial cells. The mechanism, as defined by pharmacogenomic analysis, involves identified genes from the TNF-alphaR/NFkappaB pathway. The close relationship between IL-8 secretion and genes from the TNF-alphaR/NFkappaB pathway suggests that molecular or pharmaceutical targeting of these novel genes may have strategic use in the development of new therapies for CF. From the perspective of global gene expression, both gene and drug therapy have similar genomic consequences. This is the first example showing equivalence of gene and drug therapy in CF, and suggests that a gene therapy-defined endpoint may prove to be a powerful paradigm for CF drug discovery. Finally, because the GENESAVER algorithm is capable of isolating disease-relevant genes in a hypothesis-driven manner without recourse to any a priori knowledge about the system, this new algorithm may also prove useful in applications to other genetic diseases.
囊性纤维化(CF)是美国和欧洲影响儿童的最常见的致死性常染色体隐性疾病。目前正在进行大量工作以开发基因疗法和药物疗法。导致CF的主要突变存在于CFTR基因([ΔF508]CFTR)中。这种突变导致突变蛋白向质膜的转运较差,并降低CFTR氯离子通道活性。CPX是一种CF候选药物,它与突变型CFTR结合并纠正转运缺陷。CPX还可激活突变型CFTR氯离子通道活性。CF气道在表型上被炎症信号淹没,主要由突变型CFTR气道上皮细胞持续分泌促炎细胞因子白细胞介素8(IL-8)所致。IL-8的产生受TNF-αR/NFκB途径的基因控制,CF表型可能是由于该途径的基因功能障碍所致。此外,由于CPX药物治疗和CFTR基因治疗具有相同的共同终点,即提高CFTR水平,我们推测这两种方法都应有一个共同的基因组终点。
为了验证这一假设,我们研究了IB-3 CF肺上皮细胞中IL-8的分泌和整体基因表达。细胞分别接受野生型CFTR基因治疗或CFTR替代药物CPX药物治疗。用CFTR或CPX处理的CF细胞也暴露于铜绿假单胞菌,这是CF患者常见的慢性病原体。利用cDNA微阵列评估不同条件下的整体基因表达。开发了一种新型生物信息学算法(GENESAVER)来识别其表达与IL-8分泌平行的基因。
我们在此报告,IB3 CF细胞分泌大量IL-8。然而,CFTR基因治疗和CPX药物治疗均能显著抑制IL-8分泌。尽管如此,当细胞暴露于铜绿假单胞菌时,基因治疗和药物治疗都能使CF细胞以生理性方式分泌IL-8。因此,CFTR和CPX都不是CF细胞IL-8分泌的非特异性抑制剂。一致地,药物基因组学分析表明,用CPX处理的CF细胞与用CFTR基因治疗的CF细胞非常相似。此外,在有铜绿假单胞菌存在的情况下也得到了相同的结果。基于整体基因表达相似性的经典层次聚类分析也支持这一结论。GENESAVER算法以IL-8分泌水平作为生理变量,从TNF-αR/NFκB途径中识别出一组与CF上皮细胞IL-8分泌同步表达的基因。某些其他先前已知与CF呈正相关的基因也属于这一类别。已知编码已知抑制剂的已鉴定基因表达相反,与IL-8分泌不同步。
野生型CFTR和CPX均能抑制CF上皮细胞促炎性IL-8的分泌。药物基因组学分析确定的机制涉及TNF-αR/NFκB途径中已鉴定的基因。IL-8分泌与TNF-αR/NFκB途径基因之间的密切关系表明,对这些新基因进行分子或药物靶向可能在CF新疗法的开发中具有战略用途。从整体基因表达的角度来看,基因治疗和药物治疗具有相似的基因组结果。这是第一个显示CF中基因治疗和药物治疗等效性的例子,并表明基因治疗定义的终点可能被证明是CF药物发现的有力范例。最后,由于GENESAVER算法能够以假设驱动的方式分离与疾病相关的基因,而无需借助关于该系统的任何先验知识,这种新算法在应用于其他遗传疾病时可能也很有用。