Ross Maya, Ofri Ron
Koret School of Veterinary Medicine, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Rehovot, Israel.
Neural Regen Res. 2021 Sep;16(9):1751-1759. doi: 10.4103/1673-5374.306063.
Inherited retinal degenerations are a leading and untreatbale cause of blindness, and as such they are targets for gene therapy. Numerous gene therapy treatments have progressed from laboratory research to clinical trails, and a pioneering gene therapy received the first ever FDA approval for treating patients. However, currently retinal gene therapy mostly involves subretinal injection of the therapeutic agent, which treats a limited area, entails retinal detachment and other potential complications, and requires general anesthesia with consequent risks, costs and prolonged recovery. Therefore there is great impetus to develop safer, less invasive and cheapter methods of gene delivery. A promising method is intravitreal injection, that does not cause retinal detachment, can lead to pan-retinal transduction and can be performed under local anesthesia in out-patient clinics. Intravitreally-injected vectors face several obstacles. First, the vector is diluted by the vitreous and has to overcome a long diffusion distance to the target cells. Second, the vector is exposed to the host's immune response, risking neutralization by pre-existing antibodies and triggering a stronger immune response to the injection. Third, the vector has to cross the inner limiting membrane which is both a physical and a biological barrier as it contains binding sites that could cause the vector's sequestration. Finally, in the target cell the vector is prone to proteasome degradation before delivering the transgene to the nucleus. Strategies to overcome these obstacles include modifications of the viral capsid, through rational design or directed evolution, which allow resistance to the immune system, enhancement of penetration through the inner limiting membrane or reduced degradation by intracellular proteasomes. Furthermore, physical and chemical manipulations of the inner limiting membrane and vitreous aim to improve vector penetration. Finally, compact non-viral vectors that can overcome the immunological, physical and anatomical and barriers have been developed. This paper reviews ongoing efforts to develop novel, safe and efficacious methods for intravitreal delivery of therapeutic genes for inherited retinal degenerations. To date, the most promising results are achieved in rodents with robust, pan-retinal transduction following intravitreal delivery. Trials in larger animal models demonstrate transduction mostly of inner retinal layers. Despite ongoing efforts, currently no intravitreally-injected vector has demonstrated outer retinal transduction efficacy comparable to that of subretinal delivery. Further work is warranted to test promising new viral and non-viral vectors on large animal models of inherited retinal degenerations. Positive results will pave the way to development of the next generation of treatments for inherited retinal degeneration.
遗传性视网膜变性是导致失明的主要且无法治疗的原因,因此它们是基因治疗的目标。众多基因治疗方法已从实验室研究进展到临床试验,一种开创性的基因治疗获得了美国食品药品监督管理局(FDA)有史以来首个治疗患者的批准。然而,目前视网膜基因治疗大多涉及向视网膜下注射治疗剂,这种方法治疗的区域有限,会导致视网膜脱离和其他潜在并发症,并且需要全身麻醉,随之而来的是风险、成本和较长的恢复时间。因此,开发更安全、侵入性更小且成本更低的基因递送方法具有巨大的推动力。一种有前景的方法是玻璃体内注射,它不会导致视网膜脱离,可以实现全视网膜转导,并且可以在门诊诊所进行局部麻醉下操作。玻璃体内注射的载体面临几个障碍。首先,载体被玻璃体稀释,必须克服到靶细胞的长扩散距离。其次,载体暴露于宿主的免疫反应,有被预先存在的抗体中和以及引发对注射更强免疫反应的风险。第三,载体必须穿过内界膜,内界膜既是物理屏障也是生物屏障,因为它含有可能导致载体被隔离的结合位点。最后,在靶细胞中,载体在将转基因递送至细胞核之前容易被蛋白酶体降解。克服这些障碍的策略包括通过合理设计或定向进化对病毒衣壳进行修饰,使其能够抵抗免疫系统、增强穿过内界膜的穿透能力或减少细胞内蛋白酶体的降解。此外,对内界膜和玻璃体进行物理和化学操作旨在改善载体的穿透。最后,已经开发出能够克服免疫、物理和解剖学障碍的紧凑型非病毒载体。本文综述了为遗传性视网膜变性开发新型、安全且有效的玻璃体内递送治疗基因方法的持续努力。迄今为止,最有前景的结果是在玻璃体内递送后在啮齿动物中实现了强大的全视网膜转导。在大型动物模型中的试验表明转导大多发生在内层视网膜。尽管一直在努力,但目前没有玻璃体内注射的载体显示出与视网膜下递送相当的外层视网膜转导效果。有必要进一步开展工作,在遗传性视网膜变性的大型动物模型上测试有前景的新病毒和非病毒载体。阳性结果将为开发下一代遗传性视网膜变性治疗方法铺平道路。