Electromagnetic Field Activation of Gene Therapy as an Approach to Reprogramming
Partial cell reprogramming as a basis for rejuvenation therapies is an area of great interest in the research and development communities. It has received greater funding in recent years than any other part of the field, with the founding of Altos Labs and a number of other unusually well-funded biotech companies. Reprogramming involves expression of some or all of the Yamanaka factors. Full reprogramming of a somatic cell slowly transforms that cell into a pluripotent stem cell, a recreation of the process of early embryonic development. Partial reprogramming for a shorter period of time only restores youthful epigenetic patterns of gene expression without changing cell state, and this, if it can be made to work in a living organism, is the basis for potential rejuvenation therapies.
The challenges of partial reprogramming, at least until people find a viable small molecule approach that seems safe enough to develop as a therapy, are the challenges of gene therapy, which is to say near entirely a matter of how to deliver the therapy in way that sufficiently controls degree and duration of gene expression. A given tissue can be made up of many different cell types that all need different approaches to partial reprogramming. Current gene therapy vectors struggle with effective delivery to many tissue types. Control over location and duration of expression is thus a major area of innovation in the field, a problem to be solved piece by piece. Today's open access paper is an interesting example of a novel approach to induced expression of a gene therapy, in that the induction occurs via pulsed electromagnetic fields rather than use of small molecules.
Scientists Prolong the Life of Mice With Invisible Energy Fields, New Study Shows
Researchers have established a method for inducing cellular reprogramming with electromagnetic fields (EMFs). Complete cellular reprogramming can cause cancer and early mortality, so the researchers implemented cyclic cellular reprogramming. To do so, they genetically engineered aged mice to activate cellular reprogramming genes in response to EMFs. They applied the EMFs cyclically to induce cyclic cellular reprogramming. The researchers then assessed the survival of the mice up until they were 108-weeks-old, which is roughly equivalent to the human age of 70.
The researchers found that over 75% of the reprogrammed mice lived to 108-weeks-old. Only about 60% of untreated mice survived until 108-weeks-old. To be thorough, the researchers also monitored normal-aged mice that were not genetically engineered. The survival rate for these mice was even lower, at about 50%. These findings suggest that EMF-induced cyclic cellular reprogramming can prolong the lifespan of aged mice. The researchers also found that EMF treatment countered certain aspects of aging in the engineered mice. The aorta, which thickens with age, was restored to normal thickness. Additionally, the treatment improved skin thickness and liver cell numbers, which decline with age, and it rejuvenated the spleen and kidneys. There were also signs of reduced senescent cells, which are cells that can accumulate with age and promote inflammation and tissue damage. The mice also become visibly younger, with less of a hunched back, better grooming, and a reduction in gray hair.
They started by asking a simple question: which genes naturally respond to EMFs? In mouse brain tissue, they identified one gene in particular - called Lgr4 - that could be activated and deactivated quickly. They then focused on the gene's promoter, a stretch of DNA that modulates when a gene turns on or off. From this region, they chose a specific sequence and named it Ei, short for "EMF-inducible DNA element." However, this did not explain how the EMFs actually trigger this switch. To find out, the researchers looked at what was happening inside cells. Their experiments suggested that EMFs interact with a protein called Cyb5b, setting off a chain reaction that releases calcium ions (Ca2+). Remarkably, the released Ca2+ oscillated at a frequency that activates the Ei switch.
Gaining precise control of gene expression is crucial in biomedical applications. However, spatiotemporal precision remains challenging. Here, we present a remotely controlled in vivo gene switch responsive to electromagnetic fields (EMFs) that enables precise spatiotemporal activation of target genes. We uncovered the EMF-inducible gene switch activation mechanism via a CRISPR-Cas9 screen, identifying cytochrome b5 type B (Cyb5b) as an essential mediator likely acting as an EMF sensor. The EMF-inducible gene switch was activated by rhythmic oscillatory calcium dynamics rather than generic calcium influx, defining a precisely tuned and bio-orthogonal induction mechanism.
Functionally, EMF activation of the Oct4-Sox2-Klf4 (OSK) cassette induced in vivo partial reprogramming in aged mice, conditional expression of human mutant amyloid precursor protein (APP) for Alzheimer's disease (AD) modeling recapitulated pathological features, and EMF-mediated Tph2 expression restored serotonergic activity and ameliorated depressive-like behaviors in Tph2-mutant depression mice. Overall, a remotely controlled EMF-inducible gene switch represents a versatile and effective biomedical platform.