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Halting progressive neurodegeneration in advanced retinitis pigmentosa
Susanne F. Koch, … , Chyuan-Sheng Lin, Stephen H. Tsang
Susanne F. Koch, … , Chyuan-Sheng Lin, Stephen H. Tsang
Published August 24, 2015
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2015;125(9):3704-3713. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI82462.
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Research Article Neuroscience

Halting progressive neurodegeneration in advanced retinitis pigmentosa

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Abstract

Hereditary retinal degenerative diseases, such as retinitis pigmentosa (RP), are characterized by the progressive loss of rod photoreceptors followed by loss of cones. While retinal gene therapy clinical trials demonstrated temporary improvement in visual function, this approach has yet to achieve sustained functional and anatomical rescue after disease onset in patients. The lack of sustained benefit could be due to insufficient transduction efficiency of viral vectors (“too little”) and/or because the disease is too advanced (“too late”) at the time therapy is initiated. Here, we tested the latter hypothesis and developed a mouse RP model that permits restoration of the mutant gene in all diseased photoreceptor cells, thereby ensuring sufficient transduction efficiency. We then treated mice at early, mid, or late disease stages. At all 3 time points, degeneration was halted and function was rescued for at least 1 year. Not only do our results demonstrate that gene therapy effectively preserves function after the onset of degeneration, our study also demonstrates that there is a broad therapeutic time window. Moreover, these results suggest that RP patients are treatable, despite most being diagnosed after substantial photoreceptor loss, and that gene therapy research must focus on improving transduction efficiency to maximize clinical impact.

Authors

Susanne F. Koch, Yi-Ting Tsai, Jimmy K. Duong, Wen-Hsuan Wu, Chun-Wei Hsu, Wei-Pu Wu, Luis Bonet-Ponce, Chyuan-Sheng Lin, Stephen H. Tsang

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Figure 6

Stable rescue of visual function following treatment at a late disease stage.

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Stable rescue of visual function following treatment at a late disease s...
At 8 weeks of age, mutant mice were tamoxifen injected or not; at 10 and 32 weeks of age, ERG responses were recorded. (A)Rod-specific b-wave, (B) photopic cone-specific b-wave, (C) mixed rod-cone-specific a-wave, and (D) mixed rod-cone–specific b-wave. Red dots represent individual treated mutant mice (n = 3 for each time point). Gray triangles represent individual untreated mutants (n = 10 and 4 at 10 and 32 weeks of age, respectively). Red solid lines and black dashed lines connect the group means of the treated and untreated mutant mice, respectively. For each mouse, the 2 eyes were averaged. A paired t test was used to compare weeks 10 and 32 for the treated group. A 2-sample t test was used to compare weeks 10 and 32 for the untreated mutant group. ***P < 0.001 for significant differences between weeks 10 and 32.

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