Small-scale engineering could bring big progress in medical care


Effective diagnostics, therapies and treatments for diseases and infections could increasingly involve re-engineering the body’s internal biomechanisms at their most basic chemical and molecular foundations.

Growing knowledge about the body’s biological processes is increasing the possibilities for restoring human health, says

Xiao Wang

, an associate professor of biomedical engineering in Arizona State University’s

Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering

. He and a team of researchers are exploring ways to trigger and control cell

differentiation

and transition to unlock properties that may change bioengineers’ approach to diagnostics, vaccine development and therapeutic treatments.

Recent research led by Wang and

Alexander Green

, an assistant professor of biomedical engineering at

Boston University

, reveals more about the potential for designing small add-on structures for biomolecules that can enhance their properties.

“There could be new and better kinds of applications for diagnostics, therapeutics and treatments, and for genome engineering,” Wang says. “These could be big contributions to biomedicine.”

The details about what the research may yield appear in the paper

Predictable control of RNA lifetime using engineered degradation-tuning RNAs

, published this week in the research journal Nature Chemical Biology.

Wang and Green’s focus is on

messenger RNA

, or mRNA, which carries genetic information from

DNA

, the molecule that contains the genetic blueprint needed to develop and maintain organisms — including humans.

Within cells, mRNA transmits messages from DNA to the protein-producing

ribosomes

, informing them of which proteins need to be synthesized at a given time. While DNA’s status as the information repository of the cell means that it is very stable, mRNA’s message-carrying role means it rapidly degrades. This

degradation

has made it harder to implement RNA-based therapies and diagnostics.

Wang, Green and their research team are devising methods of controlling degradation to produce predictable, precise and stable results. The new research paper describes how they are attempting to fine-tune the speed of mRNA degradation to boost the ability to perform biotechnological functions. To do this, they have identified specific RNA structural features to build a library of RNA components called degradation-tuning RNAs, or dtRNAs.

Attaching the dtRNAs to an RNA of interest through genetic engineering enables them to increase or decrease the RNA’s degradation rate, and fine-tune gene expression levels in vivo and in vitro — either inside a living organism or in a laboratory setting.

“We found that dtRNAs could be used with a variety of different types of RNAs and modify gene expression levels over a very wide range. These capabilities can increase the speed and sensitivity of medical diagnostics and give us better control over cell function,” says Green, who was an assistant professor in ASU’s

Biodesign Institute

and

School of Molecular Sciences

from 2015 to 2020 and is currently an adjunct professor with the school.

One of the more impactful results of these refining processes could be the development of mRNA-based vaccines that would be especially effective against viruses, Wang says.

“We can actually engineer the structure of RNA molecules in faster and more systematic ways that make them more efficient in how they behave,” he says.

These behavior changes will inform how effective Wang and Green’s bioengineering process will be at boosting the efficacy of diagnostics, vaccines, therapies and treatments.

###

Wang and Green’s research team includes doctoral students

Qi Zhang

,

Duo Ma

,

Kylie Standage-Beier

and

Xingwen Chen

at ASU and doctoral student

Kaiyue Wu

at Boston University. Former ASU doctoral student

Fuqing Wu

, now at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, contributed to earlier research that helped lead to the recent discoveries.

Funding for research described in the paper has come from the

Arizona Department of Health Services

, the

Arizona Biomedical Research Centre

,

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services

, the

National Institutes of Health

and the

NIH Director’s New Innovator Award

, the

National Science Foundation


,

the

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

and

Arizona State University

.


This release was authored by Joe Kullman, a science writer in the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering at Arizona State University.

This part of information is sourced from https://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2021-06/asu-sec062421.php

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