[HTML][HTML] AAV9 targets cone photoreceptors in the nonhuman primate retina

LH Vandenberghe, P Bell, AM Maguire, R Xiao… - PloS one, 2013 - journals.plos.org
LH Vandenberghe, P Bell, AM Maguire, R Xiao, TB Hopkins, R Grant, J Bennett, JM Wilson
PloS one, 2013journals.plos.org
Transduction of retinal pigment epithelial cells with an adeno-associated viral vector (AAV)
based on serotype 2 has partially corrected retinal blindness in Leber congenital amaurosis
type 2. However, many applications of gene therapy for retinal blindness rely on the efficient
transduction of rod and cone photoreceptor which is difficult to achieve with first generation
vector technology. To address this translational need, we evaluated rod and cone
photoreceptor targeting of 4 novel AAV capsids (AAV7, AAV9, rh. 64R1 and rh. 8R) versus …
Transduction of retinal pigment epithelial cells with an adeno-associated viral vector (AAV) based on serotype 2 has partially corrected retinal blindness in Leber congenital amaurosis type 2. However, many applications of gene therapy for retinal blindness rely on the efficient transduction of rod and cone photoreceptor which is difficult to achieve with first generation vector technology. To address this translational need, we evaluated rod and cone photoreceptor targeting of 4 novel AAV capsids (AAV7, AAV9, rh.64R1 and rh.8R) versus AAV2 and AAV8 in a foveated retina. Eyes of 20 nonhuman primates were injected subretinally in the proximity of the fovea. While numerous vectors efficiently transduced rods, only AAV9 targeted cones both centrally and peripherally efficiently at low doses, likely due to the abundance of galactosylated glycans, the primary receptor for AAV9, on cone photoreceptors. We conclude AAV9 is an ideal candidate for strategies that require restoration of cone photoreceptor function.
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