Revolutionizing the treatment of inherited metabolic liver disorders through directed protein evolution technology
ID
MSCA-2020-JDKock01
Supervisors
Project description
Inherited metabolic disorders of the liver (IMLD) are a heterogeneous group of rare diseases caused by a single defective enzyme in a metabolic pathway of hepatocytes. This often leads to the accumulation of toxic metabolites and the highly specific destruction of liver cells. For most IMLD, the ability to replace a portion of the defective hepatocytes or to correct the deficient enzyme in a subset of liver cells would suffice to produce a clinical cure. Transplantation of human hepatocytes represents a genuine therapy for IMLD, but is limited by a shortage of donors and the potential need for life-long immune suppression. For some IMLD, simply replacing or correcting the deficient enzyme in a subset of hepatocytes is not sufficient to provide a cure due to the cell-autonomous pathophysiology of the disease.
Major advancements in the treatment of IMLD are currently hampered by two important paradigms:
i) The medical field holds on to the fact that deficient enzymes should be replaced or corrected to their original functional wild type state, but fails to consider that available gene editing and cell replacement therapies are not efficient enough to replenish all copies of the dysfunctional gene with functional counterparts in order to completely normalize the patient’s metabolome.
ii) Cell reprogramming strategies are solely designed to use native reprogramming factors, but don’t consider that these factors weren’t intended by nature to direct cell-fate conversions that do not naturally occur during development. They are therefore not optimally adapted to efficiently perform this task, preventing the large scale production of so-called induced hepatocyte-like cells.
Our global aim is to develop various solutions to these problems by implementing a versatile technology called “directed protein evolution”. This technology allows to artificially accelerate evolution by more than six orders of magnitude through iterative rounds of smart mutagenesis and selection, resulting in new proteins with superior properties that can be subsequently used for the treatment of IMLD. A snapshot of IMLD for which we are currently developing new therapies are hereditary tyrosinemia type 1, 2 and 3, hawkinsinuria and alkaptonuria.
About the research Group
The In Vitro Toxicology and Dermato-Cosmetology (IVTD) lab
Research at IVTD focuses on the development of mechanism-based and human-relevant liver cell models for the toxicity testing of drugs and other chemical compounds, as well as for in vitro liver disease modelling purposes. These projects aim to improve human health and safety through the identification of new drug targets and liver disease biomarkers, and to facilitate greater accuracy in liver toxicity prediction.
Read more on our website: https://ivtd.research.vub.be/en/home