Materials and methods for intracellular delivery of...

Chemistry: molecular biology and microbiology – Process of mutation – cell fusion – or genetic modification – Introduction of a polynucleotide molecule into or...

Reexamination Certificate

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C435S320100, C435S455000, C424S450000, C514S04400A

Reexamination Certificate

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06171863

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Since the first demonstration in 1988 that mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) base substitution and deletion mutations are linked to human disease, a variety of degenerative diseases have been associated with mtDNA mutations (reviewed in Wallace, D. C.[1994]
J. Bioenergetics and Biomembranes
26:241-250). For example, certain deleterious base substitutions can cause familial deafness and some cases of Alzheimer's disease and Parkinson's disease. Other nucleotide substitutions have been associated with Leber's Hereditary Optic Neuropathy (LHON) and myoclonic epilepsy and ragged-red fiber disease (MERF). Base substitutions can also cause pediatric diseases such as Leigh's syndrome and dystonia. Severe rearrangements involving deletions have been linked with adult-onset chronic progressive external opthalmoplegia (CPEO) and Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS) as well as the lethal childhood disorder Pearson's marrow/pancreas syndrome (Wallace [1994], supra).
Somatic gene therapy.
Three different approaches for somatic gene therapy (reviewed in Ledley, F. D. [1996]
Pharmaceutical Res.
13:1996) can be distinguished based on the nature of the material that is administered to the patient: (a) cell-based approaches involving the administration to the patient of genetically engineered cells (“ex-vivo”), (b) administration to the patient of genetically engineered, attenuated, or defective viruses, and (c) plasmid-based approaches that involve pharmaceutical formulations of DNA molecules. A variety of viral and non-viral methods have been developed for introducing DNA molecules into a cell. Non-viral techniques include precipitation of DNA with calcium phosphate (Chen, C., H. Okayama [1987]
Mol. Cell. Biol.
7:2745-2752), dextran derivatives (Sompayrac, L., K. Danna [1981]
PNAS
12:7575-7584), or polybrene (Aubin, R. J., M. Weinfield, M. C. Paterson [1988]
Somatic Cell Mol. Genet.
14:155-167); direct introduction of DNA using cell elctroporation (Neuman, E., M. Schaefer-Ridder, Y. Wang, P. H. Hofschneider [1982]
EMBO J.
1:841-845) or DNA microinjection (Capecchi, M. R. [1980]
Cell
22:479-486); complexation of DNA with polycations (Kabanov, A. V., V. A. Kabanov [1995]
Bioconjugate Chem.
6:7-20); and DNA incorporation in reconstructed virus coats (Schreier, H., R. Chander, V. Weissig et al. [1992]
Proceed. Intern. Symp. Control. Rel. Bioact. Mater.
19:70-71; Schreier, H., M. Ausborn, S. G{umlaut over (u)}nther, V. Weissig, R. Chander [1995]
J. Molecular Recog.
8:59-62).
Cationic lipids have become important reagents for gene transfer in vitro and in vivo. Several clinical trials approved by the NIH are in progress (reviewed in Ledley, F. D. [1994]
Current Opinion in Biotechnology
5:626-636; and Ledley, F. D. [1995]
Human Gene Therapy
6:1129-1144). In terms of transfection efficiency, virus-based vectors are superior to all other DNA transfection methods. Several different viral vectors have been developed and are in clinical trials including those derived from murine leukemia viruses (retroviruses), adeno-associated virus, and adenovirus (reviewed in Ledley [1996], supra).
Transfection of mitochondria.
There have been only a few reports of nucleic acids entering mitochondria, and most have focused on the nuclear encoded RNA component of the mitochondrial RNA processing activity, RNase MRP (Chang, D. D., D. A. Clayton [1987]
Science
235:1178-1184; and Li, K., C. S. Smagulas, W. J. Parsons et al. [1994]
J. Cell. Biol.
124:871-882). The uptake of exogenous DNA into mitochondria involving the protein import pathway has been reported from two laboratories. Vestweber and Schatz ([1989
] Nature
(London) 338:170-172) achieved uptake of a 24-bp both single- and double-stranded oligonucleotide into yeast mitochondria by coupling the 5′ end of the oligonucleotide to a precursor protein consisting of the yeast cytochrome c oxidase subunit IV presequence fused to a modified mouse dihydrofolate reductase. More recently, Seibel et al. (1995,
Nucleic Acids Research
23:10-17) reported the import into the mitochondrial matrix of double-stranded DNA molecules conjugated to the amino-terminal leader peptide of the rat ornithine-transcarbamylase. Both studies, however, were done with isolated mitochondria not addressing the question of how oligonucleotide-peptideconjugates will pass the cytosolic membrane and reach mitochondrial proximity. Negatively-charged biological cell surfaces and lysosomal degradation establish major obstacles which are very unlikely to be overcome by single oligonucleotide-peptide complexes.
Dequalinium.
Dequalinium (DQA) Babbs, M., H. O. J. Collier, W. C. Austin et al. [1955]
J. Pharm. Pharmacol.
8:110-119) has been used for over 30 years as a topical antimicrobial agent. There is no consensus about the molecular target of DQA; several different targets such as the small conductance Ca
2+
-activated K
+
channel, F1-ATPase, calmodulin, and proteinase K have been suggested (Dunn, P. M. [1994]
Eur. J. Pharmacology
252:189-194; Zhuo, S., W. S. Allison [1988]
Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm.
152:968-972; Bodden, W. L., S. P. Palayoor, W. N. Hait [1986]
Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm.
135:574-582; Rotenberg, S. A., S. Smiley, M. Ueffing et al. [1990]
Cancer Res.
50:677-685). DQA is an amphiphilic dicationic compound resembling bolaform electrolytes, that is, they are symmetrical molecules with two charge centers separated at a relatively large distance. Lipophilic cations are known to localize in mitochondria of living cells as a result of the electric potential across the mitochondrial membrane (Johnson, L. V., M. L. Walsh, B. J. Bockus, L. B. Chen [1981]
J. Cell. Biol.
88:526-535). The accumulation of DQA in mitochondria has been reported (Weiss, M. J., J. R. Wong, C. S. Ha et al. [1987]
PNAS
84:5444-5448; Christman, E. J., D. S. Miller, P. Coward et al. [1990]
Gynecol. Oncol.
39:72-79; Steichen, J. D., M. J. Weiss, D. R. Elmaleh, R. L. Martuza [
1991
]
J. Neurosurg.
74:116-122; Vercesi, A. E., C. F. Bernardes, M. E. Hoffman et al. [1991]
J. Biol. Chem.
266:14431-14434).
Despite the progress being made in developing viral and non-viral DNA delivery systems, there is a need for an efficient method for introducing DNA into mitochondria of intact cells.
BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The subject invention pertains to materials and methods for selectively and specifically delivering biologically active molecules to the mitochondria. In a preferred embodiment, DNA or other polynucleotide sequence can be delivered to the mitochondria as part of a gene therapy procedure.
The subject invention pertains to the delivery to the mitochondria of a complex of DNA with a molecule having two positive charge centers separated by a hydrocarbon chain. In a specific embodiment, the subject invention concerns the transformation of a salt of dequalinium (DQA) into an effective non-viral gene therapy vector. DQA is complexed with DNA as described herein to form an effective vehicle for delivering DNA to the mitochondria. These DQA-DNA complexes are referred to herein as DQAsomes. The DQAsomes can be used effectively as described herein as a transfection system. This system is especially useful in gene therapy to treat diseases associated with abnormalities in mitochondrial DNA.


REFERENCES:
patent: 5527928 (1996-06-01), Nantz et al.
patent: 5569754 (1996-10-01), Williams et al.
patent: 5674908 (1997-10-01), Haces et al.
patent: 9534647 (1995-12-01), None
Webster's II New Riverside University Dictionary, p. 67, col. 2, 1994.
Collombet et al., (Molecular Medicine Today, vol. 4, 1:31-38), 1998.
Murphy (Trends in Biotechnology, 15, 8, 326-30), 1997.
Wessig, Volkmar, J{umlaut over (u)}rgen Lasch, Gregory Erdos, Helmut W. Meyer, Thomas C. Row, Jeffrey Hug

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