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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

AAV dose-dependent transduction efficiency in retinal ganglion cells and functional efficacy of optogenetic vision restoration.

Journal:
Gene therapy
Year:
2024
Authors:
Lu, Qi et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Ophthalmology · United States

Abstract

Optogenetics is a promising approach for restoring vision to the blind after photoreceptor degeneration. The ability to restore vision through AAV-mediated delivery of light-sensitive proteins, especially channelrhodopsins, into retinal ganglion cells has been extensively demonstrated in animal models. For clinical application, knowledge of viral dose-dependent functional efficacy is desired. In this study, using a triple-knockout blind mouse model and a highly light-sensitive channelrhodopsin variant, we evaluated viral dose-dependent vision restoration through retinal ganglion cell expression by using optomotor behavioral assays. Our results show that both the restored light sensitivity and visual acuity reached peak levels at a medial viral dose of 10 vg. With increasing dose, transduction efficiency continued to increase while protein expression peaked at the dose of ~10 vg and declined at higher doses. Also, a significant increase in retinal gliosis and inflammatory responses started at the dose of ~10 vg, and a marked increase was observed at the dose of ~10. These results provide valuable insights into viral dose design for clinical studies.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39237697/