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Anneke I. den Hollander, Aaron Black, Jean Bennett, Frans P.M. Cremers
Published in Volume 120, Issue 9
J Clin Invest. 2010; 120(9):3042–3053 doi:10.1172/JCI42258
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Figure 5
Approaches for surgical delivery of gene therapy vectors in retinal disease.

Subretinal injection is necessary to place the gene augmentation therapy reagent in contact with the target photoreceptor and RPE cells. Arrows indicate the approaches used in the postnatal/adult mouse (A), large animals/humans (B), and fetal mice (C; injection into the subretinal space adjacent to retinal progenitor cells). (DG) Frames from an intraoperative video taken during subretinal injection of the macula in a human with rAAV2.hRPE65v2 (64). In G, the cannula is withdrawn, revealing the raised fovea (black arrowhead). *optic disc; white arrowheads indicate edge of the expanding detachment.