跳转至内容
Merck
CN
  • Subretinal gene therapy delays vision loss in a Bardet-Biedl Syndrome type 10 mouse model.

Subretinal gene therapy delays vision loss in a Bardet-Biedl Syndrome type 10 mouse model.

Molecular therapy. Nucleic acids (2023-01-27)
Ying Hsu, Sajag Bhattarai, Jacob M Thompson, Angela Mahoney, Jacintha Thomas, Sara K Mayer, Poppy Datta, Janelle Garrison, Charles C Searby, Luk H Vandenberghe, Seongjin Seo, Val C Sheffield, Arlene V Drack
摘要

Blindness in Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is caused by dysfunction and loss of photoreceptor cells in the retina. BBS10, mutations of which account for approximately 21% of all BBS cases, encodes a chaperonin protein indispensable for the assembly of the BBSome, a cargo adaptor important for ciliary trafficking. The loss of BBSome function in the eye causes a reduced light sensitivity of photoreceptor cells, photoreceptor ciliary malformation, dysfunctional ciliary trafficking, and photoreceptor cell death. Cone photoreceptors lacking BBS10 have congenitally low electrical function in electroretinography. In this study, we performed gene augmentation therapy by injecting a viral construct subretinally to deliver the coding sequence of the mouse Bbs10 gene to treat retinal degeneration in a BBS10 mouse model. Long-term efficacy was assessed by measuring the electrical functions of the retina over time, imaging of the treated regions to visualize cell survival, conducting visually guided swim assays to measure functional vision, and performing retinal histology. We show that subretinal gene therapy slowed photoreceptor cell death and preserved retinal function in treated eyes. Notably, cone photoreceptors regained their electrical function after gene augmentation. Measurement of functional vision showed that subretinal gene therapy provided a significant benefit in delaying vision loss.

材料
货号
品牌
产品描述

Sigma-Aldrich
抗神经胶质纤维酸性蛋白抗体,克隆GA5, clone GA5, Chemicon®, from mouse
Sigma-Aldrich
抗突触融合蛋白3-抗体,克隆1-146, clone 1-146, from mouse