An AAV capsid reprogrammed to bind human Transferrin Receptor mediates brain-wide gene delivery.
Authors | |
Abstract | Developing vehicles that efficiently deliver genes throughout the human central nervous system (CNS) will broaden the range of treatable genetic diseases. We engineered an AAV capsid, BI-hTFR1, that binds human Transferrin Receptor (TfR1), a protein expressed on the blood-brain barrier (BBB). BI-hTFR1 was actively transported across a human brain endothelial cell layer and, relative to AAV9, provided 40-50 times greater reporter expression in the CNS of human knock-in mice. The enhanced tropism was CNS-specific and absent in wild type mice. When used to deliver , mutations of which cause Gaucher disease and are linked to Parkinson's disease, BI-hTFR1 substantially increased brain and cerebrospinal fluid glucocerebrosidase activity compared to AAV9. These findings establish BI-hTFR1 as a promising vector for human CNS gene therapy. |
Year of Publication | 2023
|
Journal | bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
|
Date Published | 12/2023
|
DOI | 10.1101/2023.12.20.572615
|
PubMed ID | 38187643
|
Links |