Department of Neuroscience, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla2Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Diego, California.
Department of Neuroscience, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla.
JAMA Neurol. 2015 Oct;72(10):1139-47. doi: 10.1001/jamaneurol.2015.1807.
Alzheimer disease (AD) is the most common neurodegenerative disorder and lacks effective disease-modifying therapies. In 2001, we initiated a clinical trial of nerve growth factor (NGF) gene therapy in AD, the first effort at gene delivery in an adult neurodegenerative disorder. This program aimed to determine whether a nervous system growth factor prevents or reduces cholinergic neuronal degeneration in patients with AD. We present postmortem findings in 10 patients with survival times ranging from 1 to 10 years after treatment.
To determine whether degenerating neurons in AD retain an ability to respond to a nervous system growth factor delivered after disease onset.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Patients in this anatomicopathological study were enrolled in clinical trials from March 2001 to October 2012 at the University of California, San Diego, Medical Center in La Jolla. Ten patients with early AD underwent NGF gene therapy using ex vivo or in vivo gene transfer. The brains of all 8 patients in the first phase 1 ex vivo trial and of 2 patients in a subsequent phase 1 in vivo trial were examined.
Brains were immunolabeled to evaluate in vivo gene expression, cholinergic neuronal responses to NGF, and activation of NGF-related cell signaling. In 2 patients, NGF protein levels were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
Among 10 patients, degenerating neurons in the AD brain responded to NGF. All patients exhibited a trophic response to NGF in the form of axonal sprouting toward the NGF source. Comparing treated and nontreated sides of the brain in 3 patients who underwent unilateral gene transfer, cholinergic neuronal hypertrophy occurred on the NGF-treated side (P < .05). Activation of cellular signaling and functional markers was present in 2 patients who underwent adeno-associated viral vectors (serotype 2)-mediated NGF gene transfer. Neurons exhibiting tau pathology and neurons free of tau expressed NGF, indicating that degenerating cells can be infected with therapeutic genes, with resultant activation of cell signaling. No adverse pathological effects related to NGF were observed.
These findings indicate that neurons of the degenerating brain retain the ability to respond to growth factors with axonal sprouting, cell hypertrophy, and activation of functional markers. Sprouting induced by NGF persists for 10 years after gene transfer. Growth factor therapy appears safe over extended periods and merits continued testing as a means of treating neurodegenerative disorders.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)是最常见的神经退行性疾病,缺乏有效的疾病修饰疗法。2001 年,我们启动了一项神经生长因子(NGF)基因治疗 AD 的临床试验,这是首次在成人神经退行性疾病中进行基因传递的尝试。该项目旨在确定神经系统生长因子是否可以预防或减少 AD 患者的胆碱能神经元变性。我们报告了治疗后 1 至 10 年存活的 10 名患者的尸检结果。
确定 AD 中变性神经元是否在疾病发作后仍能对递送至体内的神经系统生长因子产生反应。
设计、地点和参与者:这项解剖病理学研究的患者是 2001 年 3 月至 2012 年 10 月在加利福尼亚大学圣地亚哥分校医学中心拉霍亚分校参加临床试验的。10 名早期 AD 患者接受了使用离体或体内基因转移的 NGF 基因治疗。对第一阶段 1 例离体试验的 8 名患者和随后的 1 例体内试验的 2 名患者的大脑进行了检查。
用免疫标记法评估体内基因表达、NGF 对胆碱能神经元的反应以及 NGF 相关细胞信号的激活。在 2 名患者中,通过酶联免疫吸附试验测量 NGF 蛋白水平。
在 10 名患者中,AD 大脑中的变性神经元对 NGF 有反应。所有患者均表现出向 NGF 源方向轴突生长的营养反应。对 3 名接受单侧基因转移的患者进行比较,在接受 NGF 治疗的一侧发生了胆碱能神经元肥大(P <.05)。在接受腺相关病毒载体(血清型 2)介导的 NGF 基因转移的 2 名患者中,细胞信号和功能标志物的激活存在。表现出 tau 病理学的神经元和没有 tau 的神经元都表达了 NGF,表明变性细胞可以被治疗基因感染,导致细胞信号的激活。未观察到与 NGF 相关的任何不良病理影响。
这些发现表明,退化大脑中的神经元保留了通过轴突生长、细胞肥大和激活功能标志物对生长因子产生反应的能力。基因转移后 10 年内持续诱导 NGF 生长。生长因子治疗在较长时间内似乎是安全的,值得继续作为治疗神经退行性疾病的一种手段进行测试。