Carefully Guided FGF8 Expression via Gene Therapy Enhances Digit Tip Regrowth in Mice
A few species such as salamanders and zebrafish can regenerate lost limbs and even large sections of internal organs, provided they survive the injury. In comparison, mammals exhibit far less of a capacity for such proficient regeneration as adults, but the actual limits of regeneration vary widely across mammalian species. Spiny mice can regenerate full thickness skin, cartilage, and muscle as well as lost kidney tissue. The MRL mouse lineage can fully regenerate ear tissue, a capacity that was discovered because many researchers use ear notches to label their mice. Ordinary laboratory mice can regenerate the tips of their digits, and so can developing humans. Most such regenerative capacity for most mammals is lost somewhere between birth and adulthood, however.
The research community is attempting to develop a sufficient understanding of the biochemistry of proficient regeneration in salamanders and zebrafish to be able to provoke such regeneration in mammals. A few genes have so far surfaced as points of investigation, alongside significant differences in the behavior of macrophages and senescent cells in the context of injury and regrowth. In today's open access paper, researchers report on their investigations of the SP transcription factor family, leading to a focus on FGF8, one of the genes for which expression is modulated by SP transcription factors. Suitably guided upregulation of FGF8 expression, which required an enhancer from zebrafish, enhanced the ability of mice to regenerate lost digit tips. This is a modest starting point, and clearly not the whole picture, but years of research are now finally leading to the ability to at least modestly enhance regeneration in mammals.
For regrowing human limbs, this salamander gene could hold the key
Investigating a common gene in three very different species - salamanders, mice, and zebrafish - scientists have discovered the potential for a novel gene therapy aimed at eventually regrowing limbs in humans. In salamanders, SP8 does the work in regenerating limbs. Using CRISPR gene-editing technology, researchers removed SP8 from the axolotl genome. Without SP8, the axolotl could not properly regenerate the limb bones; a similar result occurred with the mouse digits missing SP6 and SP8.
With that information in hand, researchers used a tissue regeneration enhancer found in zebrafish to develop a viral gene therapy. That therapy delivered a secreted molecule called FGF8, a gene that is usually turned on by SP8, to encourage digit bone regrowth and partially restore the regenerative effects of the missing SP genes in mice. Human limbs don't have that kind of regenerative power - but might someday, with a therapy that emulates the abilities of SP genes.
Enhancer-directed gene delivery for digit regeneration based on conserved epidermal factors
Instructing regeneration of complex structures in mammals remains an unsolved problem. Gene therapy offers a compelling approach to foster endogenous regeneration by delivering therapeutic gene products to specific cells postinjury. We identified a conserved regeneration-linked epidermal transcriptional program in mouse digit regeneration centered on the SP6 and SP8 transcription factors, involving inflammatory responses from osteoclasts. Spatiotemporally focused expression of FGF8, a known target of SP factors, using a zebrafish-derived tissue regeneration enhancer element via adeno-associated viral vectors, could partially rescue digit tip regeneration in SP knockout mice and accelerate digit regeneration in wild-type mice. Our results demonstrate a contextual gene therapy approach to address limb loss based on genes like SP transcription factors conserved across multiple contexts of appendage regeneration.