4.8 Article

GDNF gene therapy for alcohol use disorder in male non-human primates

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NATURE MEDICINE
卷 29, 期 8, 页码 2030-+

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41591-023-02463-9

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Alcohol use disorder (AUD) causes significant personal, social, and economic burdens worldwide. The recurrence of alcohol use is common in AUD patients despite current pharmacotherapies. However, introducing the GDNF gene into the brain may be a potential therapeutic strategy for preventing relapse in AUD patients.
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) exacts enormous personal, social and economic costs globally. Return to alcohol use in treatment-seeking patients with AUD is common, engendered by a cycle of repeated abstinence-relapse episodes even with use of currently available pharmacotherapies. Repeated ethanol use induces dopaminergic signaling neuroadaptations in ventral tegmental area (VTA) neurons of the mesolimbic reward pathway, and sustained dysfunction of reward circuitry is associated with return to drinking behavior. We tested this hypothesis by infusing adeno-associated virus serotype 2 vector encoding human glial-derived neurotrophic factor (AAV2-hGDNF), a growth factor that enhances dopaminergic neuron function, into the VTA of four male rhesus monkeys, with another four receiving vehicle, following induction of chronic alcohol drinking. GDNF expression ablated the return to alcohol drinking behavior over a 12-month period of repeated abstinence-alcohol reintroduction challenges. This behavioral change was accompanied by neurophysiological modulations to dopamine signaling in the nucleus accumbens that countered the hypodopaminergic signaling state associated with chronic alcohol use, indicative of a therapeutic modulation of limbic circuits countering the effects of alcohol. These preclinical findings suggest gene therapy targeting relapse prevention may be a potential therapeutic strategy for AUD. In a preclinical study, the delivery of an AAV-based gene therapy encoding GDNF in the brain prevented the return to alcohol use behaviors in a non-human primate model.

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