Islamabad, Jan 28 : A new gene therapy method
developed by University of Florida researchers has the potential to treat a
common form of blindness that strikes both youngsters and adults.
The
technique works by replacing a malfunctioning gene in the eye with a normal
working copy that supplies a protein necessary for light-sensitive cells in the
eye to function.
Several complex and costly steps remain before the gene
therapy technique can be used in humans, but once at that stage, it has great
potential to change lives.
"Imagine that you can't see or can just barely
see, and that could be changed to function at some levels so that you could
read, navigate, maybe even drive -- it would change your life considerably,"
said study co-author William W. Hauswirth, Ph.D., the Rybaczki-Bullard professor
of ophthalmology in the UF College of Medicine and a professor and eminent
scholar in department of molecular genetics and microbiology and the UF Genetics
Institute. "Providing the gene that's missing is one of the ultimate ways of
treating disease and restoring significant visual function."
The
researchers tackled a condition called X-linked retinitis pigmentosa, a genetic
defect that is passed from mothers to sons. Girls carry the trait, but do not
have the kind of vision loss seen among boys. About 100,000 people in the U.S.
have a form of retinitis pigmentosa, which is characterized by initial loss of
peripheral vision and night vision, which eventually progresses to tunnel
vision, then blindness. In some cases, loss of sight coincides with the
appearance of dark-colored areas on the usually orange-colored
retina.
The UF researchers previously had success pioneering the use of
gene therapy in clinical trials to reverse a form of blindness known as Leber's
congenital amaurosis. About 5 percent of people who have retinitis pigmentosa
have this form, which affects the eye's inner lining.
"That was a great
advance, which showed that gene therapy is safe and lasts for years in humans,
but this new study has the potential for a bigger impact, because it is treating
a form of the disease that affects many more people," said John G. Flannery,
Ph.D., a professor of neurobiology at the University of California, Berkeley who
is an expert in the design of viruses for delivering replacement genes. Flannery
was not involved in the current study.
The X-linked form of retinitis
pigmentosa addressed in the new study is the most common, and is caused by
degeneration of light-sensitive cells in the eyes known as photoreceptor cells.
It starts early in life, so though affected children are often born seeing, they
gradually lose their vision.
"These children often go blind in the second
decade of life, which is a very crucial period," said co-author Alfred S. Lewin,
Ph.D., a professor in the UF College of Medicine department of molecular
genetics and microbiology and a member of the UF Genetics Institute. "This is a
compelling reason to try to develop a therapy, because this disease hinders
people's ability to fully experience their world."
Both Lewin and
Hauswirth are members of UF's Powell Gene Therapy Center.
The UF
researchers and colleagues at the University of Pennsylvania performed the
technically challenging task of cloning a working copy of the affected gene into
a virus that served as a delivery vehicle to transport it to the appropriate
part of the eye. They also cloned a genetic "switch" that would turn on the gene
once it was in place, so it could start producing a protein needed for the
damaged eye cells to function.
After laboratory tests proved successful,
the researchers expanded their NIH-funded studies and were able to cure animals
in which X-linked retinitis pigmentosa occurs naturally. The injected genes made
their way only to the spot where they were needed, and not to any other places
in the body. The study gave a good approximation of how the gene therapy might
work in humans.
"The results are encouraging and the rescue of the
damaged photoreceptor cells is quite convincing," said Flannery, who is on the
scientific advisory board of the Foundation Fighting Blindness, which provided
some funding for the study. "Since this type of study is often the step before
applying a treatment to human patients, showing that it works is
critical."
The researchers plan to repeat their studies on a larger scale
over a longer term, and make a version of the virus that proves to be safe in
humans. Once that is achieved, a pharmaceutical grade of the virus would have to
be produced and tested before moving into clinical trials in humans. The
researchers will be able to use much of the technology they have already
developed and used successfully to restore
vision.
Ends
SA/EN
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» Researchers develop gene therapy that could correct a common form of blindness
Researchers develop gene therapy that could correct a common form of blindness
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