Gene therapy progress and prospects: the eye

JWB Bainbridge, MH Tan, RR Ali - Gene therapy, 2006 - nature.com
Gene therapy, 2006nature.com
The eye has unique advantages as a target organ for gene therapy of both inherited and
acquired ocular disorders and offers a valuable model system for gene therapy. The eye is
readily accessible to phenotypic examination and investigation of therapeutic effects in vivo
by fundus imaging and electrophysiological techniques. Considerable progress has been
made in the development of gene replacement therapies for retinal degenerations resulting
from gene defects in photoreceptor cells (rds, RPGRIP, RS-1) and in retinal pigment …
Abstract
The eye has unique advantages as a target organ for gene therapy of both inherited and acquired ocular disorders and offers a valuable model system for gene therapy. The eye is readily accessible to phenotypic examination and investigation of therapeutic effects in vivo by fundus imaging and electrophysiological techniques. Considerable progress has been made in the development of gene replacement therapies for retinal degenerations resulting from gene defects in photoreceptor cells (rds, RPGRIP, RS-1) and in retinal pigment epithelial cells (MerTK, RPE65, OA1) using recombinant adeno-associated virus and lentivirus-based vectors. Gene therapy also offers a potentially powerful approach to the treatment of complex acquired disorders such as those involving angiogenesis, inflammation and degeneration, by the targeted sustained intraocular delivery of therapeutic proteins. Proposals for clinical trials of gene therapy for early-onset retinal degeneration owing to defects in the gene encoding the visual cycle protein RPE65 have recently received ethical approval.
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