4.5 Article

rAAV2/5 gene-targeting to rods: dose-dependent efficiency and complications associated with different promoters

Journal

GENE THERAPY
Volume 17, Issue 9, Pages 1162-1174

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/gt.2010.56

Keywords

rAAV vectors; promoters; rod; retina; gene transfer; dog

Funding

  1. University of Florida
  2. NIH [EY06855, EY13132, EY17549, RR02512, P30EY-001583]
  3. Foundation Fighting Blindness Individual Investigator and Center [TA-NP-0607-0393-UPA, C-CMM-04090476-UPA02, TA-GT-0507-0384-UFL]
  4. Fight for Sight Nowak
  5. Hope for Vision Foundation
  6. ONCE International Price for R&D in Biomedicine and New Technologies for the Blind

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A prerequisite for using corrective gene therapy to treat humans with inherited retinal degenerative diseases that primarily affect rods is to develop viral vectors that target specifically this population of photoreceptors. The delivery of a viral vector with photoreceptor tropism coupled with a rod-specific promoter is likely to be the safest and most efficient approach to target expression of the therapeutic gene to rods. Three promoters that included a fragment of the proximal mouse opsin promoter (mOP), the human G-protein-coupled receptor protein kinase 1 promoter (hGRK1), or the cytomegalovirus immediate early enhancer combined with the chicken beta actin proximal promoter CBA were evaluated for their specificity and robustness in driving GFP reporter gene expression in rods, when packaged in a recombinant adeno-associated viral vector of serotype 2/5 (AAV2/5), and delivered via subretinal injection to the normal canine retina. Photoreceptor-specific promoters (mOP, hGRK1) targeted robust GFP expression to rods, whereas the ubiquitously expressed CBA promoter led to transgene expression in the retinal pigment epithelium, rods, cones and rare Muller, horizontal and ganglion cells. Late onset inflammation was frequently observed both clinically and histologically with all three constructs when the highest viral titers were injected. Cone loss in the injected regions of the retinas that received the highest titers occurred with both the hGRK1 and CBA promoters. Efficient and specific rod transduction, together with preservation of retinal structure was achieved with both mOP and hGRK1 promoters when viral titers in the order of 10(11) vg ml(-1) were used. Gene Therapy (2010) 17, 1162-1174; doi:10.1038/gt.2010.56; published online 29 April 2010

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