Whole body correction of mucopolysaccharidosis IIIA by intracerebrospinal fluid gene therapy

Author

Haurigot Mendonça, Virginia

Marcó, Sara

Ribera Sánchez, Albert

Garcia, Miquel

Ruzo, Albert

Villacampa, Pilar

Ayuso, Eduard

Añor Torres, Sònia

Andaluz Martínez, Anna

Pineda, Mercedes

García-Fructuoso, Gemma

Molas, Maria

Maggioni, Luca

Muñoz-Martínez, S

Motas, Sandra

Ruberte, Jesús

Mingozzi, Federicco

Pumarola i Batlle, Martí

Bosch i Tubert, Fàtima

Publication date

2013

Abstract

For most lysosomal storage diseases (LSDs) affecting the CNS, there is currently no cure. The BBB, which limits the bioavailability of drugs administered systemically, and the short half-life of lysosomal enzymes, hamper the development of effective therapies. Mucopolysaccharidosis type IIIA (MPS IIIA) is an autosomic recessive LSD caused by a deficiency in sulfamidase, a sulfatase involved in the stepwise degradation of glycosaminoglycan (GAG) heparan sulfate. Here, we demonstrate that intracerebrospinal fluid (intra-CSF) administration of serotype 9 adenoassociated viral vectors (AAV9s) encoding sulfamidase corrects both CNS and somatic pathology in MPS IIIA mice. Following vector administration, enzymatic activity increased throughout the brain and in serum, leading to whole body correction of GAG accumulation and lysosomal pathology, normalization of behavioral deficits, and prolonged survival. To test this strategy in a larger animal, we treated beagle dogs using intracisternal or intracerebroventricular delivery. Administration of sulfamidase-encoding AAV9 resulted in transgenic expression throughout the CNS and liver and increased sulfamidase activity in CSF. High-titer serum antibodies against AAV9 only partially blocked CSF-mediated gene transfer to the brains of dogs. Consistently, anti-AAV antibody titers were lower in CSF than in serum collected from healthy and MPS IIIA-affected children. These results support the clinical translation of this approach for the treatment of MPS IIIA and other LSDs with CNS involvement.

Document Type

Article

Language

English

Publisher

 

Related items

The journal of clinical investigation ; Vol. 123 Núm. 8 (August 2013), p. 3254-3271

Rights

open access

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