Hurler综合征
I型粘多糖病
粘多糖病Ⅰ
医学
免疫抑制
遗传增强
免疫学
小胶质细胞
神经病理学
免疫系统
溶酶体贮存病
委内瑞拉马脑炎病毒
酶替代疗法
脑炎
病理
病毒
生物
疾病
基因
炎症
生物化学
作者
Carine Ciron,Nathalie Desmaris,Marie-Anne Colle,Sylvie Raoul,Béatrice Joussemet,Lucie Vérot,Jérôme Ausseil,Roseline Froissart,Françoise Roux,Yan Chérel,Nicolas Ferry,Y Lajat,Bertrand Schwartz,Marie‐Thérèse Vanier,Irène Maire,Marc Tardieu,Philippe Moullier,Jean‐Michel Heard
摘要
A defect of the lysosomal enzyme alpha-L-iduronidase (IDUA) interrupts the degradation of glycosaminoglycans in mucopolysaccharidosis type I, causing severe neurological manifestations in children with Hurler's syndrome. Delivery of the missing enzyme through stereotactic injection of adeno-associated virus vectors coding for IDUA prevents neuropathology in affected mice. We examined the efficacy and the safety of this approach in enzyme-deficient dogs.Because deficient dogs raise antibodies against IDUA in response to infusion, intracerebral vector injections were combined with an immunosuppressive regimen.Treatment was tolerated well. We observed broad dispersion of vector genomes in the brain of efficiently immunosuppressed dogs. The delivery of IDUA to large areas, which could encompass the entire brain, prevented glycosaminoglycan and secondary ganglioside accumulations. This condition was associated with drastic reduction of neuropathology throughout the encephalon. In contrast, vector injection combined with partial immunosuppression was associated with subacute encephalitis, production of antibodies against IDUA in brain tissues, and elimination of genetically modified cells.Gene therapy directed to the entire brain is feasible and may be beneficial to children with Hurler's syndrome. The possibility of subacute encephalitis emphasizes the importance of preventing immune response against IDUA, a problem that needs to be considered in similar therapies for other genetic defects.
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