4.7 Article

Combined AAV-mediated gene replacement therapy improves auditory function in a mouse model of human DFNB42 deafness

Journal

MOLECULAR THERAPY
Volume 31, Issue 9, Pages 2783-2795

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.ymthe.2023.07.014

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Recent studies have shown that inner ear gene therapy can improve auditory function in hereditary hearing loss, and the gene therapy for Ildr1w-/- mice has multiple effects on auditory function.
Hearing loss is a common disorder affecting nearly 20% of the world's population. Recently, studies have shown that inner ear gene therapy can improve auditory function in several mouse models of hereditary hearing loss. In most of these studies, the underlying mutations affect only a small number of cell types of the inner ear (e.g., sensory hair cells). Here, we applied inner ear gene therapy to the Ildr1Gt(D178D03)Wrst (Ildr1w-/-) mouse, a model of human DFNB42, non-syndromic autosomal recessive hereditary hearing loss associated with ILDR1 variants. ILDR1 is an integral protein of the tricellular tight junction complex and is expressed by diverse inner ear cell types in the organ of Corti and the cochlear lateral wall. We simultaneously applied two synthetic adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) with different tropism to deliver Ildr1 cDNA to the Ildr1w-/- mouse inner ear: one targeting the organ of Corti (AAV2.7m8) and the other targeting the cochlear lateral wall (AAV8BP2). We showed that combined AAV2.7m8/AAV8BP2 gene therapy improves cochlear structural integrity and auditory function in Ildr1w-/- mice.

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