| Literature DB >> 25452713 |
Rajvinder Karda1, Suzanne M K Buckley1, Citra N Mattar2, Joanne Ng1, Giulia Massaro3, Michael P Hughes3, Manju A Kurian4, Julien Baruteau1, Paul Gissen5, Jerry K Y Chan2, Chiara Bacchelli6, Simon N Waddington7, Ahad A Rahim3.
Abstract
Neurodegenerative monogenic diseases often affect tissues and organs beyond the nervous system. An effective treatment would require a systemic approach. The intravenous administration of novel therapies is ideal but is hampered by the inability of such drugs to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and precludes efficacy in the central nervous system. A number of these early lethal intractable diseases also present devastating irreversible pathology at birth or soon after. Therefore, any therapy would ideally be administered during the perinatal period to prevent, stop, or ameliorate disease progression. The concept of perinatal gene therapy has moved a step further toward being a feasible approach to treating such disorders. This has primarily been driven by the recent discoveries that particular serotypes of adeno-associated virus (AAV) gene delivery vectors have the ability to cross the BBB following intravenous administration. Furthermore, safety has been demonstrated after perinatal administration mice and non-human primates. This review focuses on the progress made in using AAV to achieve systemic transduction and what this means for developing perinatal gene therapy for early lethal neurodegenerative diseases.Entities:
Keywords: adeno-associated virus; gene therapy; metabolic disease; mouse models; neurodegenerative disease; non-human primates; perinatal; systemic delivery
Year: 2014 PMID: 25452713 PMCID: PMC4231876 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2014.00089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Summary of intravenously administered AAV9-mediated gene delivery studies in perinatal mice and non-human primates.
| Species | Developmental age at administration | Promoters | Transduction pattern | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse | E15 | Cytomegalovirus (CMV) | Global transduction of central and peripheral nervous system – preferential neuronal transduction. Visceral transduction. | |
| Mouse | PI | Chicken-β-actin hybrid promoter (CB) CMV | Wide spread delivery to central nervous system – preferential targeting of neurons or astrocytes. Heart and skeletal muscles. | |
| NHP | Late gestation (0.9G) | CMV | Wide spread delivery to the central and peripheral nervous system – preferential neuronal transduction. Liver, heart, and skeletal muscles. | |
| NHP | PI | CB | Preferential glial transduction in the brain and neurons in dorsal root ganglia and motor neurons of spinal cord. Muscle, liver, Kidney, spleen, heart, lungs, adrenal medulla, intestines, testis. |
Summary of using AAV in perinatal gene therapy and its clinical implication.
| • The ability of AAV serotypes to cross the BBB highlights its systemic transduction capabilities. |
| • Intravenous administration of AAV9 at either fetal or neonatal stage of development in rodents and NHP targets different cell types within the nervous system; neurons via fetal intravenous (iv) and astrocytes and microglia via neonatal iv administration. |
| • The iv approach is ideal for systemic neurodegenerative disorders. |
| • Efficient gene delivery is achieved due to; large vector to cell ratio, induction of immune-tolerance (at least in rodents) to foreign protein expression. |
| • Ideal for early lethal neurodegenerative diseases as it allows for therapeutic transduction of cells and organs prior to disease pathology manifestation. |
| • Lack of diagnostic technologies or infrastructure to identify disease in patients early enough. |
| • |
| • Over expression of the therapeutic transgene in the fetus may cause developmental abnormalities. |
| • Fetal iv preferentially targets neurons and not astrocytes. |
| • Perinatal gene therapy has been successful in a number of animal CNS diseases. |
| • Intravenous route of administration is favorable for its ability to cross the BBB and target other peripheral organs. |
| • Particular AAV serotypes ability to cross the BBB provides and alternative to intracranial administration which would require surgery and its attendant risks. |
| • Successful clinical trials have taken place where systemic delivery of AAV and disease specific transgene has been delivered topically and intravenously to patients. |