Center News Weekly

Sept. 10, 2007

Funds for innovative gene therapy

Hutchinson Center researchers share in new NIH grant on gene repair

Dr. Barry Stoddard
Dr. Barry Stoddard
Basic Sciences Division

Dr. Hans-Peter Kiem
Dr. Hans-Peter Kiem
Clinical Research Division

Two Hutchinson Center researchers will share in a new $23.7 million grant awarded to Seattle Children's Hospital Research Institute to support the Northwest Genome Engineering Consortium. Drs. Hans-Peter Kiem, in the Clinical Research Division, and Barry Stoddard, in the Basic Sciences Division, together will receive $5.2 million over the life of the National Institutes of Health grant, which will fund the development of new methods for gene repair.

Funding comes from the NIH Roadmap for Medical Research, a new type of federal grant program that addresses especially complex problems in research that require expertise across multiple scientific disciplines. The Northwest Genome Engineering Consortium (NGEC) comprises 11 projects that will build upon each other to develop methods for gene repair, an innovative approach to gene therapy.

Gene repair involves manipulating defective sequences of DNA in a targeted gene to change them to the correct sequence, restoring the gene to normal function and eliminating the cause of inherited disease. Gene repair requires multiple scientific disciplines to generate new kinds of proteins that can perform the required manipulations and then deliver them to a patient's diseased tissues.

While gene repair ultimately may be useful against a wide range of diseases, Dr. Andrew Scharenberg, project lead at Children's, and colleagues believe single-gene inherited disorders of the lymph and bone-marrow systems such as immune deficiencies, sickle-cell disease and thalassemias are the best place to start. Collectively, these disorders are a major disease burden in children worldwide. The target cells in these diseases that will be manipulated by the gene-repair process are blood stem cells, and they are readily accessible. By working with these disorders, the NGEC will build upon Seattle's strong regional expertise and reputation in this type of stem-cell repair.

Kiem said the overall objective of this project is to study homing endonuclease-based hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) gene-repair strategies in a clinically relevant animal model to improve and evaluate various HSC gene-transfer systems to treat conditions ranging from X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (XSCID) to pyruvate kinase (PK) deficiency.

Stoddard said that homing endonucleases are used in the gene-repair approach because they are extraordinarily specific DNA-binding proteins that recognize and act at individual sites within a host genome.

"These proteins are under intense study for the purpose of engineering reagents to be used for gene therapy and other applications," said Stoddard, whose laboratory has made major contributions to the understanding of homing endonucleases, from determining their structure and mechanisms to creating artificial variants of these proteins for use in gene therapy.

Three University of Washington researchers also are part of the Children's grant.

[Article adapted from a Seattle Children's Hospital Research Institute news release.]

» Read more news from Center News Weekly.


Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center
1100 Fairview Ave. N. PO Box 19024 Seattle, WA 98109
©2008 Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, a nonprofit organization.
Terms of Use & Privacy Policy.