| Literature DB >> 31408444 |
Kun Ding1, Jikui Shen1, Zibran Hafiz1, Sean F Hackett1, Raquel Lima E Silva1, Mahmood Khan1, Valeria E Lorenc1, Daiqin Chen1, Rishi Chadha1, Minie Zhang1, Sherri Van Everen2, Nicholas Buss2, Michele Fiscella2, Olivier Danos2, Peter A Campochiaro1.
Abstract
There has been great progress in ocular gene therapy, but delivery of viral vectors to the retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) and retina can be challenging. Subretinal injection, the preferred route of delivery for most applications, requires a surgical procedure that has risks. Herein we report a novel gene therapy delivery approach, suprachoroidal injection of AAV8 vectors, which is less invasive and could be done in an outpatient setting. Two weeks after suprachoroidal injection of AAV8.GFP in rats, GFP fluorescence covered 18.9% of RPE flat mounts and extended entirely around sagittal and transverse sections in RPE and photoreceptors. After 2 suprachoroidal injections of AAV8.GFP, GFP fluorescence covered 30.5% of RPE flat mounts. Similarly, widespread expression of GFP occurred in nonhuman primate and pig eyes after suprachoroidal injection of AAV8.GFP. Compared with subretinal injection in rats of RGX-314, an AAV8 vector expressing an anti-VEGF Fab, suprachoroidal injection of the same dose of RGX-314 resulted in similar expression of anti-VEGF Fab and similar suppression of VEGF-induced vascular leakage. Suprachoroidal AAV8 vector injection provides a noninvasive outpatient procedure to obtain widespread transgene expression in retina and RPE.Entities:
Keywords: Gene therapy; Ophthalmology
Mesh:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31408444 PMCID: PMC6819121 DOI: 10.1172/JCI129085
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808