4.6 Review

Gene Therapy for the Nervous System: Challenges and New Strategies

Journal

NEUROTHERAPEUTICS
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages 817-839

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s13311-014-0299-5

Keywords

Gene delivery; Central nervous system; Virus vector; Nonviral gene delivery; Gene therapy

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health/National Cancer Institute (NIH/NCI) by the NIH Common Fund, through the Office of Strategic Coordination/Office of the NIH [U19 CA179563]
  2. Voices Against Brain Cancer
  3. National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) training grant [T32 DA007237]
  4. NIH/National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS) [R01 NS086570-01]
  5. Shriners Hospitals for Children [85110-PHI-14]
  6. NIH/NINDS [R21 NS081374-01]
  7. [CA069246]

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Current clinical treatments for central nervous system (CNS) diseases, such as Parkinson's disease and glioblastoma do not halt disease progression and have significant treatment morbidities. Gene therapy has the potential to permanently correct disease by bringing in a normal gene to correct a mutant gene deficiency, knocking down mRNA of mutant alleles, and inducing cell-death in cancer cells using transgenes encoding apoptosis-inducing proteins. Promising results in clinical trials of eye disease (Leber's congenital aumorosis) and Parkinson's disease have shown that gene-based neurotherapeutics have great potential. The recent development of genome editing technology, such as zinc finger nucleases, TALENS, and CRISPR, has made the ultimate goal of gene correction a step closer. This review summarizes the challenges faced by gene-based neurotherapeutics and the current and recent strategies designed to overcome these barriers. We have chosen the following challenges to focus on in this review: (1) delivery vehicles (both virus and nonviral), (2) use of promoters for vector-mediated gene expression in CNS, and (3) delivery across the blood-brain barrier. The final section (4) focuses on promising pre-clinical/clinical studies of neurotherapeutics.

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