Behind the Scenes: Manufacturing Viruses for Hemophilia Gene Therapy
Manage episode 339547152 series 3389660
Gene therapy promises the possibility of replacing damaged and faulty disease-causing genes with functional copies, essentially rescuing disease-causing phenotypes and restoring individuals to health. At the heart of this technology are viral vectors, little vessels that leverage the evolutionary power of viruses to penetrate and shuttle genetic information into cells.
Manipulating viruses to carry genetically-modified gene copies and then producing large quantities of these viral carriers for gene therapy is no easy task. Before any gene therapy can make it to the clinic, its feasibility and success largely hinges on critical early steps in viral vector optimization and production. In this episode, we will explore the hurdles that researchers face in viral vector development and how one team overcame these challenges to produce a groundbreaking gene therapy for hemophilia.
Drug Discovery News Talks Science is a podcast where we discuss the latest news in preclinical and translational research. Behind every medical and scientific advancement lies a harrowing story of mystery and discovery. Come with us as we share these stories and connect you to the scientific minds behind them.
This podcast episode is sponsored by Mirus Bio. Mirus Bio revolutionized transfection more than 25 years ago with the introduction of its flagship product, TransIT®-LT1. Pioneering new delivery solutions, such as TransIT-X2®, Mirus is a critical supplier of novel transfection reagents. With the introduction of TransIT-VirusGEN®, Mirus expanded expertise to virus manufacturing, supporting researchers from discovery to clinic.
3 episoder