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Dive into the research topics where Harshana S. De Silva Feelixge is active.

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Featured researches published by Harshana S. De Silva Feelixge.


PLOS ONE | 2014

AAV-Mediated Delivery of Zinc Finger Nucleases Targeting Hepatitis B Virus Inhibits Active Replication

Nicholas D. Weber; Daniel Stone; Ruth Hall Sedlak; Harshana S. De Silva Feelixge; Pavitra Roychoudhury; Joshua T. Schiffer; Martine Aubert; Keith R. Jerome

Despite an existing effective vaccine, hepatitis B virus (HBV) remains a major public health concern. There are effective suppressive therapies for HBV, but they remain expensive and inaccessible to many, and not all patients respond well. Furthermore, HBV can persist as genomic covalently closed circular DNA (cccDNA) that remains in hepatocytes even during otherwise effective therapy and facilitates rebound in patients after treatment has stopped. Therefore, the need for an effective treatment that targets active and persistent HBV infections remains. As a novel approach to treat HBV, we have targeted the HBV genome for disruption to prevent viral reactivation and replication. We generated 3 zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) that target sequences within the HBV polymerase, core and X genes. Upon the formation of ZFN-induced DNA double strand breaks (DSB), imprecise repair by non-homologous end joining leads to mutations that inactivate HBV genes. We delivered HBV-specific ZFNs using self-complementary adeno-associated virus (scAAV) vectors and tested their anti-HBV activity in HepAD38 cells. HBV-ZFNs efficiently disrupted HBV target sites by inducing site-specific mutations. Cytotoxicity was seen with one of the ZFNs. scAAV-mediated delivery of a ZFN targeting HBV polymerase resulted in complete inhibition of HBV DNA replication and production of infectious HBV virions in HepAD38 cells. This effect was sustained for at least 2 weeks following only a single treatment. Furthermore, high specificity was observed for all ZFNs, as negligible off-target cleavage was seen via high-throughput sequencing of 7 closely matched potential off-target sites. These results show that HBV-targeted ZFNs can efficiently inhibit active HBV replication and suppress the cellular template for HBV persistence, making them promising candidates for eradication therapy.


Antiviral Research | 2016

Detection of treatment-resistant infectious HIV after genome-directed antiviral endonuclease therapy

Harshana S. De Silva Feelixge; Daniel Stone; Harlan L. Pietz; Pavitra Roychoudhury; Alex L. Greninger; Joshua T. Schiffer; Martine Aubert; Keith R. Jerome

Incurable chronic viral infections are a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. One potential approach to cure persistent viral infections is via the use of targeted endonucleases. Nevertheless, a potential concern for endonuclease-based antiviral therapies is the emergence of treatment resistance. Here we detect for the first time an endonuclease-resistant infectious virus that is found with high frequency after antiviral endonuclease therapy. While testing the activity of HIV pol-specific zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) alone or in combination with three prime repair exonuclease 2 (Trex2), we identified a treatment-resistant and infectious mutant virus that was derived from a ZFN-mediated disruption of reverse transcriptase (RT). Although gene disruption of HIV protease, RT and integrase could inhibit viral replication, a chance single amino acid insertion within the thumb domain of RT produced a virus that could actively replicate. The endonuclease-resistant virus could replicate in primary CD4(+) T cells, but remained susceptible to treatment with antiretroviral RT inhibitors. When secondary ZFN-derived mutations were introduced into the mutant viruss RT or integrase domains, replication could be abolished. Our observations suggest that caution should be exercised during endonuclease-based antiviral therapies; however, combination endonuclease therapies may prevent the emergence of resistance.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Digital detection of endonuclease mediated gene disruption in the HIV provirus

Ruth Hall Sedlak; Shu Liang; Nixon Niyonzima; Harshana S. De Silva Feelixge; Pavitra Roychoudhury; Alexander L. Greninger; Nicholas D. Weber; Sandrine Boissel; Andrew M. Scharenberg; Anqi Cheng; Amalia Magaret; Roger E. Bumgarner; Daniel Stone; Keith R. Jerome

Genome editing by designer nucleases is a rapidly evolving technology utilized in a highly diverse set of research fields. Among all fields, the T7 endonuclease mismatch cleavage assay, or Surveyor assay, is the most commonly used tool to assess genomic editing by designer nucleases. This assay, while relatively easy to perform, provides only a semi-quantitative measure of mutation efficiency that lacks sensitivity and accuracy. We demonstrate a simple droplet digital PCR assay that quickly quantitates a range of indel mutations with detection as low as 0.02% mutant in a wild type background and precision (≤6%CV) and accuracy superior to either mismatch cleavage assay or clonal sequencing when compared to next-generation sequencing. The precision and simplicity of this assay will facilitate comparison of gene editing approaches and their optimization, accelerating progress in this rapidly-moving field.


Current Opinion in Hiv and Aids | 2016

Cell and gene therapy strategies to eradicate HIV reservoirs.

Chelsea Spragg; Harshana S. De Silva Feelixge; Keith R. Jerome

Purpose of reviewHighly active antiretroviral treatment has dramatically improved the prognosis for people living with HIV by preventing AIDS-related morbidity and mortality through profound suppression of viral replication. However, a long-lived viral reservoir persists in latently infected cells that harbor replication-competent HIV genomes. If therapy is discontinued, latently infected memory cells inevitably reactivate and produce infectious virus, resulting in viral rebound. The reservoir is the biggest obstacle to a cure of HIV. Recent findingsThis review summarizes significant advances of the past year in the development of cellular and gene therapies for HIV cure. In particular, we highlight work done on suppression or disruption of HIV coreceptors, vectored delivery of antibodies and antibody-like molecules, T-cell therapies and HIV genome disruption. SummarySeveral recent advancements in cellular and gene therapies have emerged at the forefront of HIV cure research, potentially having broad implications for the future of HIV treatment.


Journal of Antimicrobial Chemotherapy | 2016

Pharmacodynamics of anti-HIV gene therapy using viral vectors and targeted endonucleases

Pavitra Roychoudhury; Harshana S. De Silva Feelixge; Harlan L. Pietz; Daniel Stone; Keith R. Jerome; Joshua T. Schiffer

OBJECTIVES A promising curative approach for HIV is to use designer endonucleases that bind and cleave specific target sequences within latent genomes, resulting in mutations that render the virus replication incompetent. We developed a mathematical model to describe the expression and activity of endonucleases delivered to HIV-infected cells using engineered viral vectors in order to guide dose selection and predict therapeutic outcomes. METHODS We developed a mechanistic model that predicts the number of transgene copies expressed at a given dose in individual target cells from fluorescence of a reporter gene. We fitted the model to flow cytometry datasets to determine the optimal vector serotype, promoter and dose required to achieve maximum expression. RESULTS We showed that our model provides a more accurate measure of transduction efficiency compared with gating-based methods, which underestimate the percentage of cells expressing reporter genes. We identified that gene expression follows a sigmoid dose-response relationship and that the level of gene expression saturation depends on vector serotype and promoter. We also demonstrated that significant bottlenecks exist at the level of viral uptake and gene expression: only ∼1 in 220 added vectors enter a cell and, of these, depending on the dose and promoter used, between 1 in 15 and 1 in 1500 express transgene. CONCLUSIONS Our model provides a quantitative method of dose selection and optimization that can be readily applied to a wide range of other gene therapy applications. Reducing bottlenecks in delivery will be key to reducing the number of doses required for a functional cure.


ACS Infectious Diseases | 2018

CRISPR/Cas9 and Genome Editing for Viral Disease—Is Resistance Futile?

Harshana S. De Silva Feelixge; Daniel Stone; Pavitra Roychoudhury; Martine Aubert; Keith R. Jerome

Chronic viral infections remain a major public health issue affecting millions of people worldwide. Highly active antiviral treatments have significantly improved prognosis and infection-related morbidity and mortality but have failed to eliminate persistent viral forms. Therefore, new strategies to either eradicate or control these viral reservoirs are paramount to allow patients to stop antiretroviral therapy and realize a cure. Viral genome disruption based on gene editing by programmable endonucleases is one promising curative gene therapy approach. Recent findings on RNA-guided human immunodeficiency virus 1 (HIV-1) genome cleavage by Cas9 and other gene-editing enzymes in latently infected cells have shown high levels of site-specific genome disruption and potent inhibition of virus replication. However, HIV-1 can readily develop resistance to genome editing at a single antiviral target site. Current data suggest that cellular repair associated with DNA double-strand breaks can accelerate the emergence of resistance. On the other hand, a combination antiviral target strategy can exploit the same repair mechanism to functionally cure HIV-1 infection in vitro while avoiding the development of resistance. This perspective summarizes recent findings on the biology of resistance to genome editing and discusses the significance of viral genetic diversity on the application of gene editing strategies toward cure.


bioRxiv | 2018

Viral diversity is an obligate consideration in CRISPR/Cas9 designs for HIV cure

Pavitra Roychoudhury; Harshana S. De Silva Feelixge; Daniel Reeves; Bryan T. Mayer; Daniel Stone; Joshua T. Schiffer; Keith R. Jerome

RNA-guided CRISPR/Cas9 systems can be designed to mutate or excise the integrated HIV genome from latently infected cells and have therefore been proposed as a curative approach for HIV. However, most studies to date have focused on molecular clones with ideal target site recognition and do not account for target site variability observed within and between patients. For clinical success and broad applicability, guide RNA (gRNA) selection must account for circulating strain diversity and incorporate the within-host diversity of HIV. To address this, we identified a set of gRNAs targeting HIV LTR, gag and pol using publicly available sequences for these genes. We ranked gRNAs according to global conservation across HIV-1 group M and within subtypes A-C. By considering paired and triplet combinations of gRNAs, we found triplet sets of target sites such that at least one of the gRNAs in the set was present in over 98% of all globally-available sequences. We then selected 59 gRNAs from our list of highly-conserved LTR target sites and evaluated in vitro activity using a loss-of-function LTR-GFP fusion reporter. We achieved efficient GFP knockdown with multiple gRNAs and found clustering of highly active gRNA target sites near the middle of the LTR. Using published deep-sequence data from HIV-infected patients, we found that globally conserved sites also had greater within-host target conservation. Lastly, we developed a mathematical model based on varying distributions of within-host HIV sequence diversity and enzyme efficacy. We used the model to estimate the number of doses required to deplete the latent reservoir and achieve functional cure thresholds. Our modeling results highlight the importance of within-host target site conservation. While increased doses may overcome low target cleavage efficiency, inadequate targeting of rare strains is predicted to lead to rebound upon ART cessation even with many doses. Author summary The field of genome engineering has exploded over the last decade with the discovery of targeted endonucleases such as CRISPR/Cas9. Endonucleases are now being used to develop a wide range of therapeutics and their use has expanded into antiviral therapy against latent viral infections like HIV. The idea is to induce mutations in latent viral genomes that will render them replication-incompetent, thereby producing a functional cure. Although a great deal of progress has been made, most studies to date have relied on molecular clones that represent “ideal” targets. For clinical success and broad applicability, these therapies need to account for viral genetic diversity within and between individuals. Our paper examines the impact of HIV diversity on CRISPR-based cure strategies to determine the predictors of future clinical success. We performed an exhaustive and detailed computational analysis to identify optimal CRISPR target sites, taking into consideration both within-host and global viral diversity. We coupled this with laboratory testing of highly-conserved guides and compared measured activity to predicted results. Finally, we developed a mathematical model to predict the impact of enzyme activity and viral diversity on the number of doses of a CRISPR-based therapy needed to achieve a functional cure of HIV.


BMC Biology | 2018

Viral diversity is an obligate consideration in CRISPR/Cas9 designs for targeting the HIV reservoir.

Pavitra Roychoudhury; Harshana S. De Silva Feelixge; Daniel Reeves; Bryan T. Mayer; Daniel Stone; Joshua T. Schiffer; Keith R. Jerome

BackgroundRNA-guided CRISPR/Cas9 systems can be designed to mutate or excise the integrated HIV genome from latently infected cells and have therefore been proposed as a curative approach for HIV. However, most studies to date have focused on molecular clones with ideal target site recognition and do not account for target site variability observed within and between patients. For clinical success and broad applicability, guide RNA (gRNA) selection must account for circulating strain diversity and incorporate the within-host diversity of HIV.ResultsWe identified a set of gRNAs targeting HIV LTR, gag, and pol using publicly available sequences for these genes and ranked gRNAs according to global conservation across HIV-1 group M and within subtypes A–C. By considering paired and triplet combinations of gRNAs, we found triplet sets of target sites such that at least one of the gRNAs in the set was present in over 98% of all globally available sequences. We then selected 59 gRNAs from our list of highly conserved LTR target sites and evaluated in vitro activity using a loss-of-function LTR-GFP fusion reporter. We achieved efficient GFP knockdown with multiple gRNAs and found clustering of highly active gRNA target sites near the middle of the LTR. Using published deep-sequence data from HIV-infected patients, we found that globally conserved sites also had greater within-host target conservation. Lastly, we developed a mathematical model based on varying distributions of within-host HIV sequence diversity and enzyme efficacy. We used the model to estimate the number of doses required to deplete the latent reservoir and achieve functional cure thresholds. Our modeling results highlight the importance of within-host target site conservation. While increased doses may overcome low target cleavage efficiency, inadequate targeting of rare strains is predicted to lead to rebound upon cART cessation even with many doses.ConclusionsTarget site selection must account for global and within host viral genetic diversity. Globally conserved target sites are good starting points for design, but multiplexing is essential for depleting quasispecies and preventing viral load rebound upon therapy cessation.


Scientific Reports | 2017

In vivo dynamics of AAV-mediated gene delivery to sensory neurons of the trigeminal ganglia

Chung H. Dang; Martine Aubert; Harshana S. De Silva Feelixge; Kurt Diem; Michelle Loprieno; Pavitra Roychoudhury; Daniel Stone; Keith R. Jerome

The ability to genetically manipulate trigeminal ganglion (TG) neurons would be useful in the study of the craniofacial nervous system and latent alphaherpesvirus infections. We investigated adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors for gene delivery to the TG after intradermal whiskerpad delivery in mice. We demonstrated that AAV vectors of serotypes 1, 7, 8, and 9 trafficked from the whiskerpad into TG neurons and expressed transgenes within cell bodies and axons of sensory neurons in all three branches of the TG. Gene expression was highest with AAV1, and steadily increased over time up to day 28. Both constitutive and neuronal-specific promoters were able to drive transgene expression in TG neurons. Levels of vector genomes in the TG increased with input dose, and multiple transgenes could be co-delivered to TG neurons by separate AAV vectors. In conclusion, AAV1 vectors are suitable for gene delivery to TG sensory neurons following intradermal whiskerpad injection.


Molecular Therapy | 2017

Excision of Latent HIV-1 from Infected Cells In Vivo: An Important Step Forward

Harshana S. De Silva Feelixge; Keith R. Jerome

Combination antiretroviral therapy (cART) is currently the only sustainable strategy to prevent AIDS-related morbidity and mortality in the millions of individuals living with HIV. However, even profound suppression of HIV viremia is insufficient to achieve a cure. A long-lived latent viral reservoir that harbors replication-competent provirus enables HIV to escape the effects of cART and re-establish active infection as soon as therapy is interrupted.1 Various strategies to eliminate the reservoir, or at least to achieve permanent viral remission in the absence of cART, are under investigation.

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Keith R. Jerome

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Daniel Stone

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Pavitra Roychoudhury

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Joshua T. Schiffer

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Martine Aubert

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Harlan L. Pietz

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Bryan T. Mayer

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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Daniel Reeves

Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center

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