| Literature DB >> 24917785 |
Mathieu Bourdenx1, Nathalie Dutheil1, Erwan Bezard1, Benjamin Dehay1.
Abstract
Adeno-associated virus (AAV)-mediated gene delivery has emerged as an effective and safe tool for both preclinical and clinical studies of neurological disorders. The recent discovery that several serotypes are able to cross the blood-brain barrier when administered systemically has been a real breakthrough in the field of neurodegenerative diseases. Widespread transgene expression after systemic injection could spark interest as a therapeutic approach. Such strategy will avoid invasive brain surgery and allow non-focal gene therapy promising for CNS diseases affecting large portion of the brain. Here, we will review the recent results achieved through different systemic routes of injection generated in the last decade using systemic AAV-mediated delivery and propose a brief assessment of their values. In particular, we emphasize how the methods used for virus engineering could improve brain transduction after peripheral delivery.Entities:
Keywords: AAV; gene therapy; neurodegenerative diseases; neurological disorders; systemic delivery
Year: 2014 PMID: 24917785 PMCID: PMC4040820 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2014.00050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Summary of literature reports using AAV vectors for systemic gene delivery to the CNS in mammals.
| Study | Serotype | Virus type | Reporter | Administration | Animal | Titer | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1, 8, 9, 10 | SS | GFP | i.v. (jugular vein) | Mice (PI, P5, P14, P42) | 1.5 × l011 vg/pup | rAAV9 was the most efficient | |
| 1.5 × 1012 vg/adult | Transduction efficiency decrease over time | ||||||
| 9 | SC | GFP | i.p i.m. (triceps and gastrocnemius) i.v. (temporal vein) | Mice (PI and 8 weeks) Cats (P2 and 7 weeks) | i.p: 1010 vg/mouse i.m.: 109 vg/mouse i.v.: 1011 vg/kg | i.v. route of delivery was superior to the other | |
| 1, 2, 5, 6, 6.2, 7, 9, rhlO, rh39, rh43 | SC | eGFP | i.v. (temporal vein) | Mice (PI) | 4 × 1011 | 9, rhlO, rh39, rh43 were the most efficient | |
| 9 | SS and SC | GFP | Mice (E15 and PI) | 2 × lO11 vg/embryo 4 × l011 vg/pup | |||
| 9 | SC | eGFP | Cynomolgus macaques (E140) | 3 × 1011 vg/kg | Transduction was mostly neuronal, up to 97% in the cerebellum | ||
| 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 | SS | Luciferase | i.v. (tail vein) | Mice (8–10 weeks) | 1 × 1011 | Luciferase activity in the brain was detected only after rAAV8 or -9 injection | |
| 9 | SC | GFP | i.v. (saphenous vein) | Rhesus macaques | 1.33 × 1015 vg/kg | Post-natal developed structures were more transduced than the others | |
| 9 | SC | GFP | i.v. (saphenous vein) | Cynomolgus Macaques (P1–P90, 3-year-old) | l–3 × l014 vg/kg to Pl–P90 animals 2.7 × 1011 vg/kg to adult animals | Injection to young animal was more powerful compared to injection to adult (partially attributable to the dose) | |
| 9 | SS and SC | GFP | i.v. (carotid artery) i.cm. | Cynomolgus and Rhesus macaques | 3 × 1013 vg/kg for i.v. 1.8 × l03 vg/kg for | Similar pattern for both route i.c.m. injection led to stronger expression than i.v. injection | |
| 9 | SS and SC | GFP | Mice: i.v. (tail vein) | Mice (8–12 weeks old) | Mice: up to 8 × 1013 vg/kg | Dose-dependent transgene expression | |
| Monkey: i.v. (saphenous vein) | Rhesus monkeys (3–4-year-old) | Monkey: l × 1011 vg/kg | Shift toward glial transduction was more pronounced in monkeys | ||||
| 9 | SC | GFP | Neonates: i.v. (facial vein) Adults: i.v. (tail vein) | Mice (PI and 10 weeks) | 4 × 1011 vg/animal | Neuronal transduction in neonates Astrocytic transduction in adults |