Let’s Make Better, Better
Daniel Levy M.S. 鈥18 and Mai Anh Do M.S. 鈥18 want to help bring gene therapy to the masses using a new method to deliver cancer-fighting DNA.
Using gene therapy to fight cancer isn鈥檛 a hypothetical in the United States anymore. The 鈥渇irst-gene therapy鈥 created by Novartis is groundbreaking. It鈥檚 effective. And as of August 2017, it鈥檚 FDA approved.
鈥淚t also costs a half-million dollars,鈥 Daniel Levy M.S. 鈥18 adds.
Levy is excited about the impact of chimeric antigen receptor (or CAR-T gene therapy) in treating cancers like leukemia but knows it鈥檚 not yet feasible for most patients. Currently, doctors have to remove T-cells from patients, cryogenically freeze them and transfer them to Novartis in New Jersey. Novartis then reprograms the T-cells to target and attack the cancers. The reprogrammed T-cells, called CAR-T, get transported to the patient and re-introduced back into their body to fight the cancer.
Not only is the process expensive, it鈥檚 time consuming.
鈥淲e want to skip all of that,鈥 Mai Anh Do M.S. 鈥18 says. 鈥淲e want to introduce exosomes with the CAR DNA, and then it鈥檒l search for the T-cells itself.鈥
Levy and Do are part of a group of graduate researchers in Assistant Professor Bill Lu鈥檚 lab that wants to make the process of treating cancer through gene therapy even better. Instead of taking T-cells out and treating them, they want to reverse the process by sending exosomes鈥攚hich are cell-derived sacs鈥攊n to deliver the DNA to the T-cells.
How do they do that? The key is targeting proteins. Do and Levy attach protein ligands to the outside of the exosomes which, due to their structure, can target the tissue of specific cells (like T-cells and cancer cells). Once the DNA-loaded exosome reaches the T-cell, the DNA is expressed which transforms the T-cell to a CAR-T cell which can fight the cancer.
What Can Exosomes Do for You?
Explaining this method has proved difficult, Levy says, even to colleagues at conferences. His solution is comparing the exosomes to UPS delivery trucks. In the trucks are packages with the modified, cancer-fighting DNA. Meanwhile, the targeting proteins function kind of like GPS, making sure the trucks end up in the right place.
Daniel Levy and Mai Anh Do work on a computer in the Bannan Engineering Labs
鈥淭he protein targets specific tissues or organs in your body,鈥 Levy says. 鈥淪o, it'll deliver the DNA only to the immune cells in the body.鈥
When the exosome finds the tissue it鈥檚 looking for, it latches on and delivers the DNA to the T-cell which fights the cancer, leaving healthy cells alone.
Unlike the CAR-T therapy at Novartis, this exosome delivery method was first hypothesized in 2011 and is still in its early testing. It isn鈥檛 approved for testing on humans or even animals.
In Lu鈥檚 lab, Do and Levy harvest exosomes and test the process in a culture dish, monitoring how the exosomes interact with diseased human cells鈥攚hether they go to the correct cells and how efficient they are once they get there. This could help scientists identify side effects and determine dosage down the road.
Levy and Do didn鈥檛 invent the exosome delivery approach, but their research鈥攁nd the research of other scientists鈥攃an help make it a reality.
鈥淭he next step would be to perform animal studies on mice and later on humans,鈥 Do says, explaining that testing would happen elsewhere.
If the process is deemed safe, it could have impact in more than just gene therapy and cancer treatment. Since exosomes are a means of delivery, it could be used to treat all sorts of illnesses.
鈥淟et鈥檚 say you鈥檙e lactose intolerant,鈥 Levy says. 鈥淵ou鈥檙e missing the lactase enzyme in your gut lining. If you had an exosome and put the lactase enzyme inside and then targeted to that area, then you could have lactose.鈥
Do and Levy will continue their research and hope to write a paper before graduating this spring. From there, Levy hopes to earn his Ph.D. and Do wants to find a job in a lab that works with exosomes.
Life in the Lab
Levy first became interested in bioengineering in high school when he saw someone using a prosthetic arm. The prosthetic was attached to the arm using electrodes so the person could manipulate it.
鈥淏ecause our body just fires electrical signals, he could kind of control the robotic arm based on the electrical impulses,鈥 Levy says. 鈥淚 thought that was cool.鈥
Years later, he says his work in Lu鈥檚 lab has lived up to that standard of cool. He gets to work on a project that uses new technology to help people live better lives. Levy is an even-keeled guy, but this work gets him excited.
And the research has become more than just lab work. Levy and Do joined Lu鈥檚 lab last year as graduate students. Since then, they鈥檝e spent a lot of time inside the lab located deep in the Bannan Engineering building. Plus, they鈥檝e gotten to work closely with Lu. Not just in class or in the lab but even day-to-day, immersing themselves in the craft of research. More than the basics, they鈥檝e peppered Lu with questions on the minutiae of research.
鈥淲hat I love about Santa Clara is that I can work with Dr. Lu one-on-one every day,鈥 Do says. 鈥淗e comes to the lab. He talks with us. He goes to lunch with us. We hang out. We talk about research鈥攁nd the research is cool. I think at a bigger university you don鈥檛 get that opportunity.鈥
Mai Anh Do M.S. 鈥18 wants to use exosomes with CAR DNA to simplify gene therapy treatments for cancer鈥攚hich currently cost $425,000.