Systemic delivery of MeCP2 rescues behavioral and cellular deficits in female mouse models of Rett syndrome

SK Garg, DT Lioy, H Cheval, JC McGann… - Journal of …, 2013 - Soc Neuroscience
SK Garg, DT Lioy, H Cheval, JC McGann, JM Bissonnette, MJ Murtha, KD Foust, BK Kaspar…
Journal of Neuroscience, 2013Soc Neuroscience
De novo mutations in the X-linked gene encoding the transcription factor methyl-CpG
binding protein 2 (MECP2) are the most frequent cause of the neurological disorder Rett
syndrome (RTT). Hemizygous males usually die of neonatal encephalopathy. Heterozygous
females survive into adulthood but exhibit severe symptoms including microcephaly, loss of
purposeful hand motions and speech, and motor abnormalities, which appear after a period
of apparently normal development. Most studies have focused on male mouse models …
De novo mutations in the X-linked gene encoding the transcription factor methyl-CpG binding protein 2 (MECP2) are the most frequent cause of the neurological disorder Rett syndrome (RTT). Hemizygous males usually die of neonatal encephalopathy. Heterozygous females survive into adulthood but exhibit severe symptoms including microcephaly, loss of purposeful hand motions and speech, and motor abnormalities, which appear after a period of apparently normal development. Most studies have focused on male mouse models because of the shorter latency to and severity in symptoms, yet how well these mice mimic the disease in affected females is not clear. Very few therapeutic treatments have been proposed for females, the more gender-appropriate model. Here, we show that self-complementary AAV9, bearing MeCP2 cDNA under control of a fragment of its own promoter (scAAV9/MeCP2), is capable of significantly stabilizing or reversing symptoms when administered systemically into female RTT mice. To our knowledge, this is the first potential gene therapy for females afflicted with RTT.
Soc Neuroscience