| Literature DB >> 30591984 |
Gerard A Rodrigues1, Evgenyi Shalaev2, Thomas K Karami2, James Cunningham2, Nigel K H Slater3, Hongwen M Rivers4.
Abstract
A resurgence of interest and investment in the field of gene therapy, driven in large part by advances in viral vector technology, has recently culminated in United States Food and Drug Administration approval of the first gene therapy product targeting a disease caused by mutations in a single gene. This product, LUXTURNA™ (voretigene neparvovec-rzyl; Spark Therapeutics, Inc., Philadelphia, PA), delivers a normal copy of the RPE65 gene to retinal cells for the treatment of biallelic RPE65 mutation-associated retinal dystrophy, a blinding disease. Many additional gene therapy programs targeting both inherited retinal diseases and other ocular diseases are in development, owing to an improved understanding of the genetic basis of ocular disease and the unique properties of the ocular compartment that make it amenable to local gene therapy. Here we review the growing body of literature that describes both the design and development of ocular gene therapy products, with a particular emphasis on target and vector selection, and chemistry, manufacturing, and controls.Entities:
Keywords: adeno-associated virus (AAV) vector; formulation; gene therapy; ocular diseases; product development
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30591984 PMCID: PMC6308217 DOI: 10.1007/s11095-018-2554-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharm Res ISSN: 0724-8741 Impact factor: 4.200
Summary of Active Ocular Gene Therapy Programs
| Company | Program/ Product | Disease/ Mechanism | Vector Technology | Administration Route | Status | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spark Therapeutics, Inc. | LUXTURNA™ (voretigene neparvovec-rzyl) | Confirmed biallelic RPE65 mutation–associated retinal dystrophy; | AAV2 | Subretinal injection | US approval (2017) | Prescribing information |
| Nightstar Therapeutics | NSR-REP1 | Choroideremia; | AAV2 | Subretinal injection | Phase III | Company website |
| NSR-RPGR | X-linked retinitis pigmentosa; codon-optimized | AAV | Subretinal injection | Phase I/II | Company website | |
| NSR-BEST1 | Best vitelliform macular dystrophy; | Undisclosed | Undisclosed | Preclinical | Company website | |
| RegenXBio Inc. | RGX-314 | Wet AMD; anti-VEGF monoclonal antibody fragment | NAV AAV8 | Subretinal injection | Phase I | Company website |
| Applied Genetic Technologies Corporation | XLRS (with Biogen, Inc.) | X-linked retinoschisis; | rAAV2tYF | Intravitreal injection | Phase I/II | April 10, 2018 press release |
| ACHM B3 | Achromatopsia; | rAAV2tYF | Subretinal injection | Phase I/II | Company website | |
| ACHM A3 / AGTC-402 | Achromatopsia; | rAAV2tYF | Subretinal injection | Phase I/II | Company website | |
| XLRP (with Biogen, Inc.) | X-linked retinitis pigmentosa; | rAAV2tYF | Subretinal injection | Phase I/II | April 18, 2018 press release | |
| GenSight Biologics | GS010 (rAAV2/2-ND4) | LHON | AAV2 | Intravitreal injection | Phase I/II | NCT02064569 |
| National Eye Institute, US National Institutes of Health | scAAV2-P1ND4v2 | LHON | AAV2 | Intravitreal injection | Phase I | NCT02161380 |
| Sanofi Genzyme | SAR422459 (with Oxford BioMedica) | Stargardt disease; | Lentivirus (LentiVector) | Subretinal injection | Phase II | Company website |
| SAR421869 (with Oxford BioMedica) | Usher syndrome type 1B; | Lentivirus (LentiVector) | Phase I/II | Company website | ||
| Allergan plc | RST-001 (acquired RetroSense Therapeutics LLC) | Retinitis pigmentosa; channelrhodopsin-2 optogenetic gene therapy | Undisclosed | Intravitreal injection | Phase I/II | Press releases |
| Oxford BioMedica | OXB-201 | Wet AMD; endostatin and angiostatin gene delivery | Lentivirus (LentiVector) | Subretinal injection | Phase I | Company website |
| OXB-202 | Corneal graft rejection; endostatin and angiostatin gene delivery | Lentivirus (LentiVector) | Treatment of cornea prior to transplantation | Preclinical | Company website | |
| National Eye Institute, US National Institutes of Health | RS1 AAV vector | XLRS; | AAV8 | Intravitreal injection | Phase I/IIa | NCT02317887 |
| Eyevensys | EYS606 | Noninfectious uveitis; anti–tumor necrosis factor-α plasmid delivery | EyeCET (electrotrans-fection) | Ciliary muscle transfection | Phase I/II | Company website |
| EYS609 | Retinal vein occlusion/diabetic macular edema/wet AMD; anti-VEGF plasmid delivery | EyeCET (electrotrans-fection) | Ciliary muscle transfection | Preclinical | Company website | |
| EYS611 | Retinal degeneration; neurotrophic factor plasmid delivery | EyeCET (electrotrans-fection) | Ciliary muscle transfection | Preclinical | Company website | |
| Adverum Biotechnologies (formerly Avalanche Biotherapeutics) | ADVM-032 | Wet AMD; anti-VEGF (ranibizumab) | AAV.7 m8 (4DMT) | Intravitreal injection | Undisclosed | |
| ADVM-022 | Wet AMD; anti-VEGF (aflibercept) | AAV.7 m8 (4DMT) | Intravitreal injection | Preclinical | Company website | |
| AVA-311 (with Regeneron) | XLRS; | Undisclosed | Intravitreal injection | Research | ||
| 4D Molecular Therapeutics | 4D-110 (with Roche) | Choroideremia; REP-1 | Therapeutic vector evolution | Intravitreal injection | Preclinical | Company website |
| 4D-125 | Undisclosed | Therapeutic vector evolution | Intravitreal injection | Preclinical | Company website | |
| Eos Neuroscience | Eos-013 | Optogenetic gene therapy | AAV | Preclinical | Company website | |
| Benitec Biopharma | BB-201 | Wet AMD | Novel AAV | Intravitreal injection | Preclinical | Company website |
| iVeena | IVMED-50 | Wet AMD; | AAV | Intraocular injection | Preclinical | Company website |
Summary of Gene Delivery Systems: General Characteristics, Benefits and Limitations
| Gene Delivery Vectors | Characteristics | Benefits | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adeno-associated Viral Vectors | Single-stranded DNA genome | Non-pathogenic, nonintegrating vectors | Cannot package more than ~4.5 kb of transgene DNA |
| Lentivirus Vectors | Single-stranded RNA genome | Can accommodate transgenes up to 10 kb | Low production yields |
| Adenoviral Vectors | Double-stranded DNA genome | Large transgene capacity up to 37 kb | Can elicit strong antiviral immune response |
| Non-viral Gene Delivery | Comprises a variety of approaches including liposome and polymer-based nanoparticle carriers as well as physical methods like electroporation and iontophoresis | Lower risk for immunogenicity and insertional mutagenesis compared with the viral vectors. | Lower transfection efficiency than viral vectors |
Fig. 1Adeno-associated virus serotype 1 (AAV1) structure. (a) Crystal structure of AAV1 capsid VP3 monomer (PDB ID, 3NG9). The β-strands are shown in purple ribbon, the conserved α-helix A is in red, and loops between the strands are in yellow. The dotted lines show the relative positions of the 5-fold (filled pentagon), 3-fold (filled triangle), and 2-fold (filled oval) interfaces of symmetry from the center of the capsid. An eight-stranded β-barrel (with β-sheets βCHEF and βBIDG), along with βA (labeled) and α-helix A (αA), forms the core of the VP monomer structure, flanked by large loop regions. The DE and HI loops (between β-strands D and E and between H and I, respectively) as well as the first ordered N-terminal residue (218), the C-terminus, and the interior and exterior capsid surfaces are labeled. (b) Radially color-cued (from capsid center to surface, blue to green to yellow to red) surface representation of the AAV1 capsid. The white triangle depicts a viral asymmetric unit bounded by one 5-fold axis and two 3-fold axes with a 2-fold axis between them. The approximate locations of the icosahedral 2-fold (2F), 3F, and 5F axes are indicated by the black arrows. The positions of the DE and HI loops are indicated by the dashed arrows. Reproduced from Venkatakrishnan et al. J Virol. 2013;87:4974–84. doi 10.1128/JVI.02524-12 (102) with permission from American Society for Microbiology. © 2013.
Fig. 2Adeno-associated virus (AAV) stability with respect to final frozen pH (correlation coefficient, r2 = 0.97). Lfu represents lac-forming unit. Reprinted by permission from Springer Nature: Springer Publishing Company, Gene Therapy. Croyle MA, Cheng X, Wilson JM. Development of formulations that enhance physical stability of viral vectors for gene therapy. © 2001. 2001 (101).
Fig. 3Dependence of adeno-associated virus serotype 2 (AAV2) vector aggregation on osmolarity (a), ionic strength (b), and purification method (c). The average particle radius of the AAV2-FIX vector was measured by dynamic light scattering following vector dilution in varying concentrations of excipients buffered with 10 mM sodium phosphate, pH 7.5. (a, b) Filled circles: sodium chloride; open circles: sodium citrate; filled squares: sodium phosphate; open squares: sodium sulfate; inverted filled squares: magnesium sulfate; open diamonds: glycerol. Vector was purified by method 3 (chromatography plus CsCl gradient). (c) The vector was purified by one of three different methods as the ionic strength was adjusted with NaCl. + symbols: method 1 (double CsCl gradient); open triangles: method 2 (cation exchange chromatography); filled triangles: method 2 plus nuclease digestion; x symbols: method 3. Republished from Wright et al. (93) under the terms of the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license ().
Fig. 4Recovery of adeno-associated virus serotype 2 (AAV2) following dilution and passage through the administration device. Stock AAV2-RPE65 vector diluted to 1×1011 vg/mL in phosphate-buffered saline with (+PF68) or with (−PF68). Pluronic 68 0.001% was drawn into 1-mL syringes, and the vector was passed through device A, B, or C. Republished from Bennicelli et al. (105) under the terms of the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license ().
Fig. 5Potency of liquid formulation for an investigational protein drug product during storage at different temperatures (data from EY Shalaev, “Role of Ice in Destabilization of Proteins”, presented at the AAPS National Biotechnology Conference, Boston, MA, May 18, 2016).
Fig. 6Thermal profiles of rAAV serotypes 1 to 9 and rAAVrh.10 produced by DSF analysis. The DSF spectra display normalized RFUs (relative fluorescence units) vs. temperature. A representative DSF spectrum is shown for each rAAV serotype. Republished from Bennett et al. (124) under the terms of the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 license ().
Fig. 7Example of circular dichroism (CD) spectra of AAV serotype 1 (AAV1) viral-linked proteins at different temperatures. A clear α-helical propensity can be seen for AAV1. This helical signal is lost as temperature increases. Reproduced from Venkatakrishnan et al. J Virol. 2013;87:4974–84. doi 10.1128/JVI.02524-12 (102) with permission from American Society for Microbiology. © 2013.