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Journal Article
Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
Safety and Efficacy of AAV5 Vectors Expressing Human or Canine CNGB3 in CNGB3-Mutant Dogs.
Human Gene Therapy. Clinical Development 2017 December
Achromatopsia is an inherited retinal disorder of cone photoreceptors characterized by markedly reduced visual acuity, extreme light sensitivity, and absence of color discrimination. Approximately 50% of cases are caused by mutations in the cone photoreceptor-specific cyclic nucleotide gated channel beta subunit (CNGB3) gene. Studies in CNGB3-mutant dogs showed that subretinal injection of an AAV vector expressing human CNGB3, which has 76% amino acid identity with canine CNGB3, driven by a 2.1 kb human red cone opsin promoter (PR2.1) and packaged in AAV5 capsids (AAV5-PR2.1-hCNGB3) rescued cone photoreceptor function, but at high doses was associated with an inflammatory response (focal chorioretinitis) consistent with immune-mediated toxicity. AAV vectors containing the PR2.1 promoter packaged in AAV5 capsids and expressing either the native canine CNGB3 (AAV5-PR2.1-cCNGB3) or the human CNGB3 (AAV5-PR2.1-hCNGB3) were evaluated at different dose levels in CNGB3-mutant dogs. The vector expressing canine CNGB3 achieved somewhat better rescue of cone function but unexpectedly was associated with a greater degree of retinal toxicity than the vector expressing human CNGB3. Very low-level T-cell immune responses to some AAV or CNGB3 peptides were observed in animals that received the higher vector dose. There was a more than twofold increase in serum neutralizing antibodies to AAV in one of three animals in the low-dose group and in two of three animals in the high-dose group. No serum anti-hCNGB3 antibodies were detected in any animal. The results of this study do not support the hypothesis that the focal chorioretinitis seen with high doses of AAV5-PR2.1-hCNGB3 in the initial studies was due to an immune response to human CNGB3.
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