| Literature DB >> 33920974 |
Jess Rhee1, Kendrick Co Shih2.
Abstract
We systematically reviewed published translational research on gene-based therapy for retinal ganglion cell (RGC) neuroprotection. A search was conducted on Entrez PubMed on 23 December 2020 using the keywords "gene therapy", "retinal ganglion cell" and "neuroprotection". The initial search yielded 82 relevant articles. After restricting publications to those with full text available and in the English language, and then curating for only original articles on gene-based therapy, the final yield was 18 relevant articles. From the 18 papers, 17 of the papers utilized an adeno-associated viral (AAV) vector for gene therapy encoding specific genes of interest. Specifically, six of the studies utilized an AAV vector encoding brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), two of the studies utilized an AAV vector encoding erythropoietin (EPO), the remaining 10 papers utilized AAV vectors encoding different genes and one microRNA study. Although the literature shows promising results in both in vivo and in vitro models, there is still a significant way to go before gene-based therapy for RGC neuroprotection can proceed to clinical trials. Namely, the models of injury in many of the studies were more acute in nature, unlike the more progressive and neurodegenerative pathophysiology of diseases, such as glaucoma. The regulation of gene expression is also highly unexplored despite the use of AAV vectors in the majority of the studies reviewed. It is also expected that with the successful launch of messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA)-based vaccinations in 2020, we will see a shift towards this technology for gene-based therapy in glaucoma neuroprotection.Entities:
Keywords: gene-based therapy; glaucoma neuroprotection; optic nerve injury; retinal ganglion cell
Year: 2021 PMID: 33920974 PMCID: PMC8071340 DOI: 10.3390/biom11040581
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomolecules ISSN: 2218-273X
Figure 1Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA) flowchart illustrating the selection process of the articles.
Summary of in vivo and in vitro studies utilizing an adeno-associated viral (AAV) vector encoding brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) as gene therapy.
| Reference/Study | Country | Injury Model and Animal | Groups and Sample Size | Parameters for Efficacy | Main Result | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| a. Adeno-associated viral vector gene therapy (AAV2) encoding BDNF (AAV2-BDNF) | Poland | Microbead induced elevated IOP, | 12 negative control, 14 damaged only, and 13 damage + treatment | RGC count | Significant attenuation of RGC loss in AAV2-BDNF treated rats (1267 ± 60 RGCs/mm2) vs. glaucoma induced rats (758 ± 124 RGCs/mm2). | Neuroprotection of RGCs |
| b. AAV2 gene therapy encoding BDNF and tropomyosin related receptor kinase-B (AAV2 TrkB-2A-mBDNF) | United Kingdom | 4 negative control, 4 empty vector control, 4 TrkB + BDNF treated, 4 TrkB treated only, 4 BDNF treated only | Neuroprotective effect via TUNEL measurement | TrkB + BDNF treated SH-SY5Y cells significantly reduced TUNEL positive apoptotic cells. | The neuroprotective effects of just BDNF or TrkB treatment alone were not assessed when damaged with hydrogen peroxide. | |
| c. AAV2 gene therapy encoding BDNF and TrkB (AAV2 TrkB-2A-mBDNF) Osborne A. et al., 2018 [ | United Kingdom | Optic nerve crush, mice and rats | Brn3a positive RGC count | BDNF treatment significantly rescued Brn3a+ RGCs. | TrkB + BDNF were able to significantly rescue more RGCs than BDNF treatment only | |
| d. Tyrosine triple mutated AAV2-BDNF (tm-scAAV2-BDNF) gene therapy Shiozawa A.L. et al., 2020 [ | Japan | 6 negative control, 6 damage, 9 damaged + treatment | Inner retinal layer thickness | Significant attenuation of inner retinal thickness loss in damage + treatment mice vs. damage only mice. | Protection and prevention of histological changes caused by NMDA. | |
| e. tm-scAAV2-BDNF gene therapy | Japan | Increased IOP via saline infusion to induce retinal ischemia/reperfusion (I/R), mouse | 6 control, 6 damage, 6 damage + empty vector, 6 damage + treatment | Inner retinal layer thickness | Significant attenuation of inner retinal thickness loss in damage + treatment mice (45.4 ± 4.2 µm) vs. damage + empty vector mice (30.2 ± 3.0 µm). | Protective effects of BDNF indicated by the thicker retinal structure and no significant difference with normal mice. |
| f. AAV2-BDNF gene therapy and/or an AAV2 vector encoding a mutated phosphor-resistant version of collapsing response mediator protein 2 (AAV2-CRMP2T555A) Chiha W. et al., 2020 [ | Australia | Unilateral partial transection of the optic nerve, rats | 11 negative control, 11 control vector with GFP, 6 BDNF + GFP, 9 BDNF only, 9 CRMP2T555A only, 10 BDNF + CRMP2T555A | Visual function via optokinetic nystagmus response | Injured rats with BDNF (BDNF only and BDNF + CRMPT2T555A) had a significantly increased total number of pursuits compared to injured rats with control vector with GFP injections. | Partial ON transection has been previously reported to reduce the optokinetic nystagmus response. Total pursuits included smooth, partial, and micro pursuits. Smooth and fast rests were not significantly different. |
Summary of in vivo studies utilizing an AAV vector encoding erythropoietin (EPO) as gene therapy.
| Reference/Study | Country | Injury Model and Animal | Groups and Sample Size | Parameters for Efficacy | Main Result | Remarks |
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| a. AAV2-EPO gene therapy | China | 10 negative control, 10 damage + treatment, 10 damage only, 10 treatment only | Visual function via ERG responses | Scotopic B-wave amplitudes and photopic ERG responses in the damage + treatment group were significantly higher than the damage only group. | The damage + treatment group was not significantly different than the control group. | |
| b. rAAV.EpoR76E gene therapy | United States | DBA/2J mouse model of glaucoma | 15 negative control, 25 GFP vector control, 30 treated mice | Protection against vision loss | The N1 and P1 amplitudes in treated mice were not significantly different from negative control or GFP vector control mice. | IOP was not significantly different between treated and GFP vector control mice. |
Summary of in vivo studies utilizing an AAV vector encoding nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (NRF2) as gene therapy.
| Reference/Study | Country | Injury Model and Animal | Groups and Sample Size | Parameters for Efficacy | Main Result | Remarks |
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| a. AAV2-NRF2 and AAV2-Sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) gene therapy | United States | Induction of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE), mice | 10 negative control, 10 injury + vehicle, 10 GFP only, 10 injury + GFP, 25 AAV2-NRF2, 25 AAV2-SIRT1 | Visual acuity | Injured mice treated with AAV2-SIRT1 had significant improvement in optokinetic responses (OKR) compared to injury + GFP mice. | There was no significant improvement in OKR with AAV2-NRF2 treatment. |
| b. AAV2-pMcp-NRF2 gene therapy | Japan | ON crush model, mice | 8 negative control, 8 pMcp promoter treatment, 8 CMV promoter treatment | mRNA expression of target gene (NRF2) | Mice with ON crush had significantly higher expression of NRF2 compared to mice treated with AAV2-pMcp-NRF2 without injury. | An increase in NRF2 gene expression selectively in injured eyes suggests positive selectivity with the pMcp promoter. |
Summary of in vivo studies utilizing an AAV vector encoding different genes as gene therapy.
| Reference/Study | Country | Injury Model and Animal | Groups and Sample Size | Parameters for Efficacy | Main Result | Remarks |
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| a. scAAV2-C3 gene therapy | China | I/R injury induced by elevated IOP by saline injection, rats | 4 negative control, 4 injury only, 4 GFP only, 4 injury + GFP, 4 treatment only, 4 injury + treatment | RhoA inhibition | Injury + treated rats had significantly lower protein levels of RhoA compared to negative control and GFP only rats | RhoA has involvement in apoptosis and C3 has been shown to inhibit Rho and protect RGCs from NMDA induced damage. |
| b. AAV-mSncg promoter-driven CRISPR/Cas9 gene therapy | United States | ON crush injury model, mice | 8 control gRNA in LSL-Flag-SpCas9 mice, 9 target gRNA in LSL-Flag-SpCas9 mice, 8 control gRNA in WT mice, 9 target gRNA in WT mice | AAV-mSncg promoter and GFP expression | The mouse Scng promoter (AAV-mSncg-EGFP) binds and targets hPSC-derived human RGCs expressing tdTomato based on merge labelling (of GFP and tdTomato) significantly more than the human Scng promoter (AAV-hSncg-EGFP). | Yellow fluorescence was indicated as proper targeting of inherent tdTomato expression in the hPSC-derived human RGCs and appropriate AAV-mSncg-EGFP targeting. |
| c. AAV2-pigment epithelium-derived factor (PEDF) + human mesenchymal stem cell (hMSC) gene therapy | Brazil | ON crush injury model, rats | 9 control, 5 GFP only, 7 PEDF only, 9 PEDF + hMSC, 3 GFP + hMSC | RGC neuroprotection assessed via Tuj1+ cells | Injured mice that were treated with PEDF had a significantly higher number of Tuj1+ cells compared to GFP only. | Significance was not reported between PEDF treated and control mice, although it seems that PEDF treatment was not able to increase Tuj+ cells to control levels. |
| d. AAV2-CR2-Crry gene therapy | United States | DBA/2J mouse model of glaucoma | 25 control, 26 GFP only, 34 treatment | IOP measurement | Mice that were treated did not have any difference in expected IOP elevation compared to aged control and GFP only mice. | DBA/2J mice develop progressive RGC degeneration as they age. |
| e. AAV-STC-1 gene therapy | United States | Transgenic mice models of retinal degeneration (P23H-1 and S334ter-4) | 7 negative control P23H-1 mice, 8 negative control S334ter-4 mice, 7 treatment + P23H-1 mice, 8 treatment + S334ter-4 | Optic nerve length (ONL) thickness and ERG responses | Both P23H-1 and S334ter-4 treated mice had significantly thicker ONL compared to untreated transgenic mice. However, only P23H-1 treated mice had significant improvement in scotopic and photopic B-waves in ERG responses compared to untreated P23H-1 mice. | Only P23H-1 treated mice showed improvement in ERG responses. |
| f. AAV2-Neuroglobin (NGB) gene therapy | France | DBA/2J mouse model of glaucoma | 31 control (untreated), 18 early treatment (2 months), 12 late treatment (8 months) | RGC count via Brn3a+ cells | Early treatment with AAV2-NGB significantly increased RGC counts compared to control. | Late treatment showed no increase in RGC counts compared to control. |
| g. AAV2-serum soluble Fas Ligand (sFasL) gene therapy | United States | DBA/2J mouse model of glaucoma or microbead induction of elevated IOP in mice | 10 negative control, 10 positive, control 10 GFP only, 10 treatment | IOP measurement | There was no significant difference in IOP at months 3, 5, 7 or 9 (all measured time points) between positive control, GFP only, and treatment groups. | Treatment had no improvement on IOP, and qualitatively, there was no improvement in pigment dispersion and iris atrophy. |
Summary of in vivo studies utilizing microRNA as gene therapy.
| Reference/Study | Country | Injury Model and Animal | Groups and Sample Size | Parameters for Efficacy | Main Result | Remarks |
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| a. MicroRNA-21 based gene therapy | China | ON crush model, rats | 6 negative control, 6 injury only, 6 injury + agomir (miR-21 mimic), 6 injury + antagomir (miR-21 inhibitor) | Axon count and flash visual evoked potentials (F-VEP) amplitude and latency | Injury + antagomir rats had significantly higher axons/mm compared to negative control at all measured distances away from ON injury (250, 500, and 1000 µm). | F-VEP amplitude is associated with functional optic nerve fibres and latency is associated with optic nerve demyelination or conductive issues. |