Viral gene therapy: Leveraging structural biology for safer cures
- Time:
- Monday, November 4th, 9:30 am to 10:15 am
- Location:
- Century Ballroom A
- Speaker(s):
- Mavis Agbandje-McKennaDirector, Center for Structural Biology, McKnight Brain Institute; professor of biochemistry and molecular biology, University of Florida
After decades of effort, gene therapy is happening: In November 2012, the European Commission approved a viral gene therapy for a rare metabolic syndrome causing pancreatitis, while clinical trials are well under way for a treatment for a rare form of blindness. Both therapies use adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) as a vector for delivering genes to the cell nucleus. But the pursuit of viral vectors for gene therapy and the battle against pathogenic viruses are both hampered by the subtle shape-shifting of viruses and the immune system’s equally dynamic response to them. Mavis Agbandje-McKenna will describe what structural virologists are doing to understand how AAVs recognize cell-surface receptors, traffic genes into the cell, fend off antibodies and then release and replicate in the nucleus.
For more information, see the CASW website.