4.7 Article

Quantification of human mature frataxin protein expression in nonhuman primate hearts after gene therapy

Journal

COMMUNICATIONS BIOLOGY
Volume 6, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-023-05472-z

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Deficiency in human mature frataxin protein leads to Friedreich's ataxia. Gene therapy, specifically increasing the expression of heart frataxin protein, offers a potential way to prevent early mortality in patients. Using rhesus macaques, researchers tested the pharmacology of a gene therapy treatment and successfully developed a species-specific quantitative method to analyze protein expression in monkey heart tissue.
Deficiency in human mature frataxin (hFXN-M) protein is responsible for the devastating neurodegenerative and cardiodegenerative disease of Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA). It results primarily through epigenetic silencing of the FXN gene by GAA triplet repeats on intron 1 of both alleles. GAA repeat lengths are most commonly between 600 and 1200 but can reach 1700. A subset of approximately 3% of FRDA patients have GAA repeats on one allele and a mutation on the other. FRDA patients die most commonly in their 30s from heart disease. Therefore, increasing expression of heart hFXN-M using gene therapy offers a way to prevent early mortality in FRDA. We used rhesus macaque monkeys to test the pharmacology of an adeno-associated virus (AAV)hu68.CB7.hFXN therapy. The advantage of using non-human primates for hFXN-M gene therapy studies is that hFXN-M and monkey FXN-M (mFXN-M) are 98.5% identical, which limits potential immunologic side-effects. However, this presented a formidable bioanalytical challenge in quantification of proteins with almost identical sequences. This could be overcome by the development of a species-specific quantitative mass spectrometry-based method, which has revealed for the first time, robust transgene-specific human protein expression in monkey heart tissue. The dose response is non-linear resulting in a ten-fold increase in monkey heart hFXN-M protein expression with only a three-fold increase in dose of the vector. Species-specific quantitative mass spectrometry revealed robust human frataxin expression in monkey heart tissue after dosing with an AAV vector expressing frataxin and a non-linear increase in protein expression with increasing amounts of vector (248 characters).

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