Giannoukakis Nick, Robbins Paul D
Department of Pathology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213, USA.
BioDrugs. 2002;16(3):149-73. doi: 10.2165/00063030-200216030-00001.
The last 5 years have witnessed an explosion in the use of genes and cells as biomedicines. While primarily aimed at cancer, gene engineering and cell therapy strategies have additionally been used for Mendelian, neurodegenerative and metabolic disorders. The main focus of gene and cell therapy strategies in metabolism has been diabetes mellitus. This disease is a disorder of glucose homeostasis, either due to the immune-mediated eradication of pancreatic beta cells in the islets of Langerhans (type 1 diabetes) or resulting from insulin resistance and obesity syndromes where the insulin-producing capability of the beta cell is ultimately exhausted in the face of insensitivity to the effects of insulin in the peripheral glucose-utilising tissues (type 2 diabetes). A significant number of animal studies have demonstrated the potential in restoring normoglycaemia by islet transplantation in the context of immunoregulation achieved by gene transfer of immunoregulatory genes to allo- and xenogeneic islets ex vivo. Additionally, gene and cell therapy has also been used to induce tolerance to auto- and alloantigens and to generate the tolerant state in autoimmune rodent animal models of type 1 diabetes or rodent recipients of allogeneic/xenogeneic islet transplants. The achievements of gene and cell therapy in type 2 diabetes are less evident, but seminal studies promise that this modality can be relevant to treat and perhaps prevent the underlying causes of the disease. Here we present an overview of the current status of gene and cell therapy for type 1 and 2 diabetes and we propose potential therapeutic options that could be clinically useful. For type 1 diabetes, transplantation of islets engineered to evade or suppress the recipient immune response is the most readily-available technology today. A number of gene delivery vectors encoding proteins that impair a variety of immune cells have already been examined and proven versatile. More challenging but, nonetheless, just over the horizon are attempts to promote tolerance to islet allografts. Type 2 diabetes will likely require a better understanding of the processes that determine insulin sensitivity in the periphery. Targeting tissues such as muscle and fat with vectors encoding genes whose products promote insulin sensitivity and glucose uptake is an approach that does not carry with it the side-effects often associated with pharmacologic agents currently in use. In the end, progress in vector design, elucidation of antigen-specific immunity and insulin sensitivity will provide the framework for gene drug use in the treatment of type 1 and type 2 diabetes.
在过去的五年里,基因和细胞作为生物药物的应用呈爆炸式增长。虽然主要针对癌症,但基因工程和细胞治疗策略也被用于治疗孟德尔疾病、神经退行性疾病和代谢紊乱。基因和细胞治疗策略在代谢领域的主要焦点是糖尿病。这种疾病是葡萄糖稳态的紊乱,要么是由于免疫介导的胰岛β细胞在朗格汉斯岛被清除(1型糖尿病),要么是由于胰岛素抵抗和肥胖综合征,在这种情况下,面对外周葡萄糖利用组织对胰岛素作用的不敏感,β细胞产生胰岛素的能力最终耗尽(2型糖尿病)。大量动物研究表明,通过基因转移免疫调节基因在体外对同种异体和异种胰岛进行免疫调节,胰岛移植恢复正常血糖具有潜力。此外,基因和细胞治疗也被用于诱导对自身抗原和同种异体抗原的耐受性,并在1型糖尿病的自身免疫啮齿动物模型或同种异体/异种胰岛移植的啮齿动物受体中产生耐受状态。基因和细胞治疗在2型糖尿病中的成果不太明显,但开创性研究表明,这种方式可能与治疗甚至预防该疾病的潜在病因相关。在这里,我们概述了1型和2型糖尿病基因和细胞治疗的现状,并提出了可能具有临床应用价值的潜在治疗方案。对于1型糖尿病,设计能够逃避或抑制受体免疫反应的胰岛移植是目前最容易获得的技术。已经研究了许多编码损害各种免疫细胞的蛋白质的基因递送载体,并证明它们具有通用性。更具挑战性但即将实现的是促进对胰岛同种异体移植的耐受性。2型糖尿病可能需要更好地了解决定外周胰岛素敏感性的过程。用编码其产物促进胰岛素敏感性和葡萄糖摄取的基因的载体靶向肌肉和脂肪等组织,是一种不会带来目前使用的药物通常伴随副作用的方法。最终,载体设计、抗原特异性免疫和胰岛素敏感性的阐明将为1型和2型糖尿病治疗中基因药物的使用提供框架。