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10.2: Transgenes and monogenic diseases

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    148621
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    The earliest-known genetic diseases were monogenic – diseases such as sickle cell disease and cystic fibrosis, caused by mutations that disabled single genes. And so, as the we came to learn which genes and mutations led to these disease, it made sense to ask, what if we could reintroduce a working copy? Wouldn’t that cure the disease? And sure enough, the first successful therapy was in 1990, when a child’s severe combined immune deficiency was cured by adding a working copy of adenosine deaminase to her hematopoetic stem cells. In another example, the first approved gene therapy in the world was in China, and it treats head and neck cancer by introducing a working copy of the gene for the p53 tumor suppressor. Another obvious target is sickle-cell disease, which is caused by a mutation to the beta-globin gene which codes for hemoglobin. A CRISPR-based therapy was cleared for patients very recently. 

    In each of these cases, a working copy of a transgene is inserted into the genome, and expression of the working copy compensates for the mutated version that is already present. But that’s not the only thing a transgene could do to treat or cure a disease? What other options are there?


    10.2: Transgenes and monogenic diseases is shared under a not declared license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by LibreTexts.

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