| Literature DB >> 28807567 |
Antoine Chaffiol1, Romain Caplette1, Céline Jaillard1, Elena Brazhnikova1, Mélissa Desrosiers1, Elisabeth Dubus1, Laëtitia Duhamel1, Emilie Macé1, Olivier Marre1, Patrick Benoit2, Philippe Hantraye3, Alexis-Pierre Bemelmans3, Ernst Bamberg4, Jens Duebel5, José-Alain Sahel6, Serge Picaud7, Deniz Dalkara8.
Abstract
The majority of inherited retinal degenerations converge on the phenotype of photoreceptor cell death. Second- and third-order neurons are spared in these diseases, making it possible to restore retinal light responses using optogenetics. Viral expression of channelrhodopsin in the third-order neurons under ubiquitous promoters was previously shown to restore visual function, albeit at light intensities above illumination safety thresholds. Here, we report (to our knowledge, for the first time) activation of macaque retinas, up to 6 months post-injection, using channelrhodopsin-Ca2+-permeable channelrhodopsin (CatCh) at safe light intensities. High-level CatCh expression was achieved due to a new promoter based on the regulatory region of the gamma-synuclein gene (SNCG) allowing strong expression in ganglion cells across species. Our promoter, in combination with clinically proven adeno-associated virus 2 (AAV2), provides CatCh expression in peri-foveolar ganglion cells responding robustly to light under the illumination safety thresholds for the human eye. On the contrary, the threshold of activation and the proportion of unresponsive cells were much higher when a ubiquitous promoter (cytomegalovirus [CMV]) was used to express CatCh. The results of our study suggest that the inclusion of optimized promoters is key in the path to clinical translation of optogenetics.Entities:
Keywords: AAV; optogenetics; retinal gene therapy; retinitis pigmentosa; visual restoration
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28807567 PMCID: PMC5675708 DOI: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2017.07.011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Ther ISSN: 1525-0016 Impact factor: 11.454