Successful Gene Therapy in the RPGRIP1-deficient Dog: a Large Model of Cone-Rod Dystrophy.

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Lhériteau, Elsa | Petit, Lolita | Weber, Michel | Le Meur, Guylène | Deschamps, Jack-Yves | Libeau, Lyse | Mendes-Madeira, Alexandra | Guihal, Caroline | François, Achille | Guyon, Richard | Provost, Nathalie | Lemoine, Françoise | Papal, Samantha | El-Amraoui, Aziz | Colle, Marie-Anne | Moullier, Philippe | Rolling, Fabienne

Edité par CCSD ; Cell Press -

International audience. For the development of new therapies, proof-of-concept studies in large animal models that share clinical features with their human counterparts represent a pivotal step. For inherited retinal dystrophies primarily involving photoreceptor cells, the efficacy of gene therapy has been demonstrated in canine models of stationary cone dystrophies and progressive rod-cone dystrophies but not in large models of progressive cone-rod dystrophies, another important cause of blindness. To address the last issue, we evaluated gene therapy in the retinitis pigmentosa GTPase regulator interacting protein 1 (RPGRIP1)-deficient dog, a model exhibiting a severe cone-rod dystrophy similar to that seen in humans. Subretinal injection of AAV5 (n = 5) or AAV8 (n = 2) encoding the canine Rpgrip1 improved photoreceptor survival in transduced areas of treated retinas. Cone function was significantly and stably rescued in all treated eyes (18-72% of those recorded in normal eyes) up to 24 months postinjection. Rod function was also preserved (22-29% of baseline function) in four of the five treated dogs up to 24 months postinjection. No detectable rod function remained in untreated contralateral eyes. More importantly, treatment preserved bright- and dim-light vision. Efficacy of gene therapy in this large animal model of cone-rod dystrophy provides great promise for human treatment.

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