作者
Alissa Muller,Jack M. Sullivan,Wibke Schwarzer,Mantian Wang,Cindy Park‐Windhol,Pascal W. Hasler,Lucas Janeschitz‐Kriegl,Mert Duman,Beryll Klingler,Jane Matsell,Simon Manuel Hostettler,Patricia Galliker,Yanyan Hou,Pierre Balmer,Tamás Virág,Luis Barrera,Lauren Young,Quan Xu,Dániel Péter Magda,Ferenc Kilin,Arogya Khadka,Pierre‐Henri Moreau,Lyne Fellmann,Thierry Azoulay,Mathieu Quinodoz,Duygu Karademir,Jan Leppert,Alex Fratzl,Georg Kosche,Ruchi Sharma,Jair Montford,Marco Cattaneo,Mikaël Croyal,Thérèse Cronin,Simone Picelli,Alice Grison,Cameron S. Cowan,Ákos Kusnyerik,Philipp Anders,Magdalena Renner,Zoltán Zsolt Nagy,Arnold Szabó,Kapil Bharti,Carlo Rivolta,Hendrik P. N. Scholl,David I. Bryson,Giuseppe Ciaramella,Botond Roska,Bence György
摘要
Abstract Stargardt disease is a currently untreatable, inherited neurodegenerative disease that leads to macular degeneration and blindness due to loss-of-function mutations in the ABCA4 gene. We have designed a dual adeno-associated viral vector encoding a split-intein adenine base editor to correct the most common mutation in ABCA4 (c.5882G>A, p.Gly1961Glu). We optimized ABCA4 base editing in human models, including retinal organoids, induced pluripotent stem cell-derived retinal pigment epithelial (RPE) cells, as well as adult human retinal explants and RPE/choroid explants in vitro. The resulting gene therapy vectors achieved high levels of gene correction in mutation-carrying mice and in female nonhuman primates, with average editing of 75% of cones and 87% of RPE cells in vivo, which has the potential to translate to a clinical benefit. No off-target editing was detectable in human retinal explants and RPE/choroid explants. The high editing rates in primates show promise for efficient gene editing in other ocular diseases that are targetable by base editing.