As shown in the Figure 1A above, the most common setup involves the use of a two-plasmid system – one containing the expression cassette flanked by TIRs and the other encoding the transposase. This system is capable of delivering a large payload with minimal loss of efficiency.
As one of the pioneers in the field of virus-free gene therapy, our team was the first to discover that piggyBac, a DNA transposon isolated from cabbage moths, is the most promising DNA transposon system for gene therapy as compared to other DNA transposon systems (Wu S et al., PNAS 2006, 103 (41) 15008-15013). Given the unique desirable features of the piggyBac system for gene therapy (see Figure 1B), advancing the piggyBac transposon system for clinical applications is GenomeFrontier’s main focus. Our endeavors have resulted in the development of a potentially safer and more robust piggyBac-based system, named Quantum pBac™ (Figure 3), which holds promise for gene therapy, particularly in CAR-T cell therapy (Meir et al., FASEB J 2013, 27 (11) 4429-4443; Meir et al., BMC Biotechnology 2011, 11:28; manuscripts in preparation). The developmental history of Quantum pBac™ in comparison with other therapeutic vectors in the context of CAR-T cell therapy arena is illustrated below (Figure 2).