Hohman Thomas C
Envision Consulting LLC, Ocean City, NJ, USA.
Handb Exp Pharmacol. 2017;242:337-367. doi: 10.1007/164_2016_91.
As our understanding of the genetic basis for inherited retinal disease has expanded, gene therapy has advanced into clinical development. When the gene mutations associated with inherited retinal dystrophies were identified, it became possible to create animal models in which individual gene were altered to match the human mutations. The retina of these animals were then characterized to assess whether the mutated genes produced retinal phenotypes characteristic of disease-affected patients. Following the identification of a subpopulation of patients with the affected gene and the development of techniques for the viral gene transduction of retinal cells, it has become possible to deliver a copy of the normal gene into the retinal sites of the mutated genes. When this was performed in animal models of monogenic diseases, at an early stage of retinal degeneration when the affected cells remained viable, successful gene augmentation corrected the structural and functional lesions characteristic of the specific diseases in the areas of the retina that were successfully transduced. These studies provided the essential proof-of-concept needed to advance monogenic gene therapies into clinic development; these therapies include treatments for: Leber's congenital amaurosis type 2, caused by mutations to RPE65, retinoid isomerohydrolase; choroideremia, caused by mutations to REP1, Rab escort protein 1; autosomal recessive Stargardt disease, caused by mutations to ABCA4, the photoreceptor-specific ATP-binding transporter; Usher 1B disease caused by mutations to MYO7A, myosin heavy chain 7; X-linked juvenile retinoschisis caused by mutations to RS1, retinoschisin; autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa caused by mutations to MERTK, the proto-oncogene tyrosine-protein kinase MER; Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy caused by mutations to ND4, mitochondrial nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide ubiquinone oxidoreductase (complex I) subunit 4 and achromatopsia, caused by mutations to CNGA3, cyclic nucleotide-gated channel alpha 3 and CNGB3, cyclic nucleotide-gated channel beta 3. This review includes a tabulated summary of treatments for these monogenic retinal dystrophies that have entered into clinical development, as well as a brief summary of the preclinical data that supported their advancement into clinical development.
随着我们对遗传性视网膜疾病遗传基础的理解不断拓展,基因治疗已进入临床开发阶段。当与遗传性视网膜营养不良相关的基因突变被确定后,就有可能创建动物模型,在这些模型中,单个基因被改变以匹配人类突变。然后对这些动物的视网膜进行特征分析,以评估突变基因是否产生了受疾病影响患者特有的视网膜表型。在确定了携带相关致病基因的患者亚群并开发出视网膜细胞病毒基因转导技术之后,就有可能将正常基因的拷贝递送至突变基因所在的视网膜部位。当在单基因疾病的动物模型中进行此项操作时,在视网膜变性的早期阶段,即受影响的细胞仍存活时,成功的基因增强纠正了成功转导区域视网膜中特定疾病特有的结构和功能损伤。这些研究为将单基因基因治疗推进到临床开发提供了必要的概念验证;这些治疗包括针对以下疾病的治疗:由RPE65(视黄醛异构水解酶)突变引起的2型莱伯先天性黑蒙;由REP1(Rab护送蛋白1)突变引起的脉络膜视网膜萎缩;由ABCA4(光感受器特异性ATP结合转运蛋白)突变引起的常染色体隐性遗传性Stargardt病;由MYO7A(肌球蛋白重链7)突变引起的Usher 1B病;由RS1(视网膜分裂蛋白)突变引起的X连锁青少年视网膜劈裂症;由MERTK(原癌基因酪氨酸蛋白激酶MER)突变引起的常染色体隐性视网膜色素变性;由ND4(线粒体烟酰胺腺嘌呤二核苷酸泛醌氧化还原酶(复合体I)亚基4)突变引起的Leber遗传性视神经病变,以及由CNGA3(环核苷酸门控通道α3)和CNGB3(环核苷酸门控通道β3)突变引起的全色盲。本综述包括已进入临床开发阶段的这些单基因视网膜营养不良治疗方法的列表总结,以及支持它们进入临床开发的临床前数据的简要总结。