Pharmacological and rAAV gene therapy rescue of visual functions in a blind mouse model of Leber congenital amaurosis

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Publication Type Journal Article
School or College School of Medicine
Department Ophthalmology
Creator Baehr, Wolfgang
Other Author Batten, Matthew L; Imanishi, Yoshikazu; Tu, Daniel C; Doan, Thuy; Zhu, Li; Pang, Jijing; Glushakova, Lyudmila; Moise, Alexander R; Van Gelder, Russell N; Hauswirth, William W; Rieke, Fred; Palczewski, Krzysztof
Title Pharmacological and rAAV gene therapy rescue of visual functions in a blind mouse model of Leber congenital amaurosis
Date 2005
Description BACKGROUND: Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA), a heterogeneous early-onset retinal dystrophy, accounts for approximately 15% of inherited congenital blindness. One cause of LCA is loss of the enzyme lecithin:retinol acyl transferase (LRAT), which is required for regeneration of the visual photopigment in the retina. METHODS AND FINDINGS: An animal model of LCA, the Lrat-/- mouse, recapitulates clinical features of the human disease. Here, we report that two interventions--intraocular gene therapy and oral pharmacologic treatment with novel retinoid compounds--each restore retinal function to Lrat-/- mice. Gene therapy using intraocular injection of recombinant adeno-associated virus carrying the Lrat gene successfully restored electroretinographic responses to approximately 50% of wild-type levels (p < 0.05 versus wild-type and knockout controls), and pupillary light responses (PLRs) of Lrat-/- mice increased approximately 2.5 log units (p < 0.05). Pharmacological intervention with orally administered pro-drugs 9-cis-retinyl acetate and 9-cis-retinyl succinate (which chemically bypass the LRAT-catalyzed step in chromophore regeneration) also caused long-lasting restoration of retinal function in LRAT-deficient mice and increased ERG response from approximately 5% of wild-type levels in Lrat-/- mice to approximately 50% of wild-type levels in treated Lrat-/- mice (p < 0.05 versus wild-type and knockout controls). The interventions produced markedly increased levels of visual pigment from undetectable levels to 600 pmoles per eye in retinoid treated mice, and approximately 1,000-fold improvements in PLR and electroretinogram sensitivity. The techniques were complementary when combined. CONCLUSION: Intraocular gene therapy and pharmacologic bypass provide highly effective and complementary means for restoring retinal function in this animal model of human hereditary blindness. These complementary methods offer hope of developing treatment to restore vision in humans with certain forms of hereditary congenital blindness.
Type Text
Publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Volume 2
Issue 11
First Page 1177
Last Page 1189
Subject Disease Models, Animal; Genetic Vectors; Molecular Sequence Data
Subject MESH Acyltransferases; Blindness; Gene Therapy
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Batten, M. L., Imanishi, Y., Tu, D. C., Doan, T., Zhu, L., Pang, J., Glushakova, L., Moise, A. R., Baehr, W., Van Gelder, R. N., Hauswirth, W. W., Rieke, F., & Palczewski, K. (2005). Pharmacological and rAAV gene therapy rescue of visual functions in a blind mouse model of Leber congenital amaurosis. PLoS Med (Online), 2(11), e333, 1177-89.
Rights Management (c) [Author]
Format Medium application/pdf
Identifier ir-main,1745
ARK ark:/87278/s6zs3dnr
Setname ir_uspace
ID 703055
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s6zs3dnr
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