Team:Penn/ProjectResults

From 2012.igem.org

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<p style="color:black;text-indent:30px;">What if you could combine spatial targeting and cellular targeting into the same therapeutic?  What if you coupled one of the targeting mechanisms with a dose response?  This idea is unprecedented but would allow for precise targeting of specific cells within a specific area, leaving healthy tissue intact and keeping side effects to a minimum. Higher dose precision means more of the therapeutic would be used efficiently in the targeted area and the dependency on passive diffusion – and the uncertainties that comes with it – would be eliminated.</p>
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<p style="color:black;text-indent:30px;">The 2012 Penn iGEM team has engineered a novel, <b>modular</b> platform for targeted therapeutics that employs simultaneous spatial and cellular targeting. We have achieved spatial (and temporal) targeting with a blue light-switchable transgene expression system and cellular targeting through display of an antibody-mimetic protein on the surface of E. coli for the first time.  Our platform also enables more precise dose control in the targeted area through the length of blue-light exposure, which allows us to regulate effective levels of transgene expression.</p>
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<p style="color:black;text-indent:30px;">As a proof of concept, we applied our system to the treatment of cancer, a disease in which spatial and cellular targeting are of utmost importance. We displayed a high-affinity antibody-mimetic protein that targets Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2 (HER2), a protein commonly overexpressed in cancer cells, especially in breast cancer tumors. We combined this cellular targeting with a light-activated cytotoxic protein delivery system to successfully target and kill breast cancer cells.</p>
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<b><div class="name" align="center">Proof of Concept</div></b>
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<p style="color:black;text-indent:30px;">What if you could combine spatial targeting and cellular targeting into the same therapeutic?  What if you coupled one of the targeting mechanisms with a dose response?  This idea is unprecedented but would allow for precise targeting of specific cells within a specific area, leaving healthy tissue intact and keeping side effects to a minimum. Higher dose precision means more of the therapeutic would be used efficiently in the targeted area and the dependency on passive diffusion – and the uncertainties that comes with it – would be eliminated.</p>
<p style="color:black;text-indent:30px;">What if you could combine spatial targeting and cellular targeting into the same therapeutic?  What if you coupled one of the targeting mechanisms with a dose response?  This idea is unprecedented but would allow for precise targeting of specific cells within a specific area, leaving healthy tissue intact and keeping side effects to a minimum. Higher dose precision means more of the therapeutic would be used efficiently in the targeted area and the dependency on passive diffusion – and the uncertainties that comes with it – would be eliminated.</p>

Revision as of 23:57, 26 October 2012

Penn 2012 iGEM Wiki

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A Novel Therapeutic Platform

What if you could combine spatial targeting and cellular targeting into the same therapeutic? What if you coupled one of the targeting mechanisms with a dose response? This idea is unprecedented but would allow for precise targeting of specific cells within a specific area, leaving healthy tissue intact and keeping side effects to a minimum. Higher dose precision means more of the therapeutic would be used efficiently in the targeted area and the dependency on passive diffusion – and the uncertainties that comes with it – would be eliminated.

The 2012 Penn iGEM team has engineered a novel, modular platform for targeted therapeutics that employs simultaneous spatial and cellular targeting. We have achieved spatial (and temporal) targeting with a blue light-switchable transgene expression system and cellular targeting through display of an antibody-mimetic protein on the surface of E. coli for the first time. Our platform also enables more precise dose control in the targeted area through the length of blue-light exposure, which allows us to regulate effective levels of transgene expression.

As a proof of concept, we applied our system to the treatment of cancer, a disease in which spatial and cellular targeting are of utmost importance. We displayed a high-affinity antibody-mimetic protein that targets Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2 (HER2), a protein commonly overexpressed in cancer cells, especially in breast cancer tumors. We combined this cellular targeting with a light-activated cytotoxic protein delivery system to successfully target and kill breast cancer cells.

Modularity

What if you could combine spatial targeting and cellular targeting into the same therapeutic? What if you coupled one of the targeting mechanisms with a dose response? This idea is unprecedented but would allow for precise targeting of specific cells within a specific area, leaving healthy tissue intact and keeping side effects to a minimum. Higher dose precision means more of the therapeutic would be used efficiently in the targeted area and the dependency on passive diffusion – and the uncertainties that comes with it – would be eliminated.

The 2012 Penn iGEM team has engineered a novel, modular platform for targeted therapeutics that employs simultaneous spatial and cellular targeting. We have achieved spatial (and temporal) targeting with a blue light-switchable transgene expression system and cellular targeting through display of an antibody-mimetic protein on the surface of E. coli for the first time. Our platform also enables more precise dose control in the targeted area through the length of blue-light exposure, which allows us to regulate effective levels of transgene expression.

As a proof of concept, we applied our system to the treatment of cancer, a disease in which spatial and cellular targeting are of utmost importance. We displayed a high-affinity antibody-mimetic protein that targets Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2 (HER2), a protein commonly overexpressed in cancer cells, especially in breast cancer tumors. We combined this cellular targeting with a light-activated cytotoxic protein delivery system to successfully target and kill breast cancer cells.

Proof of Concept

What if you could combine spatial targeting and cellular targeting into the same therapeutic? What if you coupled one of the targeting mechanisms with a dose response? This idea is unprecedented but would allow for precise targeting of specific cells within a specific area, leaving healthy tissue intact and keeping side effects to a minimum. Higher dose precision means more of the therapeutic would be used efficiently in the targeted area and the dependency on passive diffusion – and the uncertainties that comes with it – would be eliminated.

The 2012 Penn iGEM team has engineered a novel, modular platform for targeted therapeutics that employs simultaneous spatial and cellular targeting. We have achieved spatial (and temporal) targeting with a blue light-switchable transgene expression system and cellular targeting through display of an antibody-mimetic protein on the surface of E. coli for the first time. Our platform also enables more precise dose control in the targeted area through the length of blue-light exposure, which allows us to regulate effective levels of transgene expression.

As a proof of concept, we applied our system to the treatment of cancer, a disease in which spatial and cellular targeting are of utmost importance. We displayed a high-affinity antibody-mimetic protein that targets Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2 (HER2), a protein commonly overexpressed in cancer cells, especially in breast cancer tumors. We combined this cellular targeting with a light-activated cytotoxic protein delivery system to successfully target and kill breast cancer cells.

Human Practices

Upon conception of this project, we realized that although hundreds of academic research projects and iGEM projects have been conducted in the realm of Health and Medicine, almost no engineered bacterial therapeutics have been brought to the clinic. We analyzed the hurdles and road ahead for bacterial synthetic biology-enabled therapeutics, compiling a thorough report with specific actions that iGEM teams in Health/Medicine can take to make their therapies more clinically tractable. This project directly informed our wet lab work, leading us to port our therapeutic system into a non-pathogenic, probiotic bacterial strain which is already used in human therapies today.

We hope our targeted therapeutic platform will allow other scientists and iGEM teams to target any cells they choose. In the near term, we are planning to test our cancer cell targeting/killing bacterial system in a mouse model and make a real impact on cancer research and therapy.