Next Generation Gene Therapy for the Treatment of Chronic Myocardial Ischemia and Heart Failure
Acronym
HeartGenes
Description of the granted funding
BACKGROUND: Therapeutic angiogenesis has great potential for the treatment of severe heart diseases. However, this requires novel approaches and development of new technology.
ADVANCING STATE-OF-THE-ART: We will develop novel VEGF-B and VEGF-C-based gene therapy to treat refractory angina and heart failure (HF). VEGF-B and VEGF-C lead factors were selected from extensive pig studies where they showed the best benefits among all VEGFs, such as relative cardiac specificity, potent angiogenic and metabolic effects (VEGF-B) and lymphangiogenic activity (VEGF-C). Exogenous gene transfer and new endogenous gene activation technology will be developed.
Key new technologies are riboswitch-regulated-AAV8 vectors, Super-Enhancer driven cell-type targeted gene expression, VEGF-B and VEGF-C designer mutants for better efficacy and activation of natural endogenous VEGF-B and VEGF-C expression with promoter binding shRNAs, circRNAs, CRISPR/mutantCas9-VP64-SAM gene activation technology and using a novel concept of the release of promoter pausing. Immunological concerns of AAV8 and usefulness of new synthetic dendrimer carriers will be addressed.
HeartGenes utilizes optimized percutaneous intramyocardial and retrograde venous gene delivery in pig chronic ischemia and HF models, clinically relevant pig exercise test, and 15O-H2O and 18F-FDG PET/MRI imaging to detect treatment effects.
Simultaneously, HeartGenes will take a realistic approach to clinical translation and starts intramyocardial vs retrograde venous riboswitch-AAV8-VEGF-B186 phase I trial in refractory angina as the first step to bring the best novel constructs and the most advanced functional and imaging endpoints developed in HeartGenes to clinical testing at the end of the project.
SIGNIFICANCE: If successful, this approach will bring a paradigm shift to cardiac gene therapy and new therapeutic options for heart diseases. Novel new technologies may also become widely applicable in other areas of medicine.
Show moreStarting year
2021
End year
2026
Granted funding
Funder
European Union
Funding instrument
ERC Advanced Grant
Framework programme
Horizon 2020 Framework Programme
Call
Programme part
EXCELLENT SCIENCE - European Research Council (ERC) (5215Topic
ERC Advanced Grant (ERC-2019-ADGCall ID
ERC-2019-ADG Other information
Funding decision number
884382
Identified topics
cardiovascular diseases