4.5 Article

Lentiviral gene therapy with IGF2-tagged GAA normalizes the skeletal muscle proteome in murine Pompe disease

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOMICS
Volume 291, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jprot.2023.105037

Keywords

Pompe disease; Glycogen storage disease type II; Lentiviral gene therapy; Acid-alpha glucosidase; Proteome; Lysosomal storage disease

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Pompe disease is a lysosomal storage disorder characterized by glycogen accumulation in skeletal muscle, leading to profound pathology. This study showed that lentiviral gene therapy with LV-IGF2.GAAco can nearly completely correct disease-associated proteomic changes, supporting its future clinical development as a new treatment option for Pompe disease.
Pompe disease is a lysosomal storage disorder caused by deficiency of acid alpha-glucosidase (GAA), resulting in glycogen accumulation with profound pathology in skeletal muscle. We recently developed an optimized form of lentiviral gene therapy for Pompe disease in which a codon-optimized version of the GAA transgene (LV-GAAco) was fused to an insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF2) peptide (LV-IGF2.GAAco), to promote cellular uptake via the cation-independent mannose-6-phosphate/IGF2 receptor. Lentiviral gene therapy with LV-IGF2.GAAco showed superior efficacy in heart, skeletal muscle, and brain of Gaa- /- mice compared to gene therapy with untagged LV-GAAco. Here, we used quantitative mass spectrometry using TMT labeling to analyze the muscle proteome and the response to gene therapy in Gaa- /- mice. We found that muscle of Gaa- /- mice displayed altered levels of proteins including those with functions in the CLEAR signaling pathway, autophagy, cytoplasmic glycogen metabolism, calcium homeostasis, redox signaling, mitochondrial function, fatty acid transport, muscle contraction, cytoskeletal organization, phagosome maturation, and inflammation. Gene therapy with LV-GAAco resulted in partial correction of the muscle proteome, while gene therapy with LV-IGF2.GAAco resulted in a nearcomplete restoration to wild type levels without inducing extra proteomic changes, supporting clinical development of lentiviral gene therapy for Pompe disease. Significance: Lysosomal glycogen accumulation is the primary cause of Pompe disease, and leads to a cascade of pathological events in cardiac and skeletal muscle and in the central nervous system. In this study, we identified the proteomic changes that are caused by Pompe disease in skeletal muscle of a mouse model. We showed that lentiviral gene therapy with LV-IGF2.GAAco nearly completely corrects disease-associated proteomic changes. This study supports the future clinical development of lentiviral gene therapy with LV-IGF2.GAAco as a new treatment option for Pompe disease.

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