4.6 Article

TP53 Gene Therapy as a Potential Treatment for Patients with COVID-19

Journal

VIRUSES-BASEL
Volume 14, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/v14040739

Keywords

SARS-CoV-2; COVID-19; p53; TP53; gene therapy; innate immunity; host antiviral defense

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SGT-53 is a novel investigational agent that carries a plasmid vector driving expression of the human TP53 gene. It is currently being tested in phase II trials for advanced pancreatic cancer. Studies have shown that p53, besides being a tumor suppressor, also plays a role in immune responses. Various viruses manipulate p53-dependent pathways to counteract the antiviral activities of the host immune system. Transfection of cells with SGT-53 can produce exogenous active p53 protein, making it a potential therapy for infections including COVID-19.
SGT-53 is a novel investigational agent that comprises an immunoliposome carrying a plasmid vector driving expression of the human TP53 gene that encodes wild-type human p53. SGT-53 is currently in phase II human trials for advanced pancreatic cancer. Although p53 is best known as a tumor suppressor, its participation in both innate and adaptive immune responses is well documented. It is now clear that p53 is an important component of the host response to various viral infections. To facilitate their viral life cycles, viruses have developed a diverse repertoire of strategies for counteracting the antiviral activities of host immune system by manipulating p53-dependent pathways in host cells. Coronaviruses reduce endogenous p53 levels in the cells they infect by enhancing the degradation of p53 in proteasomes. Thus, interference with p53 function is an important component in viral pathogenesis. Transfection of cells by SGT-53 has been shown to transiently produce exogenous p53 that is active as a pleiotropic transcription factor. We herein summarize the rationale for repurposing SGT-53 as a therapy for infection by SARS-CoV-2, the pathogen responsible for the COVID-19 pandemic. Because p53 regulation was found to play a crucial role in different infection stages of a wide variety of viruses, it is rational to believe that restoring p53 function based on SGT-53 treatment may lead to beneficial therapeutic outcomes for infectious disease at large including heretofore unknown viral pathogens that may emerge in the future.

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