Gene Therapy in Opn1mw−/−/Opn1sw−/− Mice and Implications for Blue Cone Monochromacy Patients with Deletion Mutations

X Ma, ER Sechrest, D Fajardo, P Zhu, F Dyka… - Human Gene …, 2022 - liebertpub.com
X Ma, ER Sechrest, D Fajardo, P Zhu, F Dyka, Y Wang, E Lobanova, SE Boye, W Baehr
Human Gene Therapy, 2022liebertpub.com
Blue cone monochromacy (BCM) is a congenital vision disorder affecting both middle-
wavelength (M) and long-wavelength (L) cone photoreceptors of the human retina. BCM
results from abolished expression of green and red light-sensitive visual pigments
expressed in M-and L-cones, respectively. Previously, we showed that gene augmentation
therapy to deliver either human L-or M-opsin rescues dorsal M-opsin dominant cone
photoreceptors structurally and functionally in treated M-opsin knockout (Opn1mw−/−) mice …
Blue cone monochromacy (BCM) is a congenital vision disorder affecting both middle-wavelength (M) and long-wavelength (L) cone photoreceptors of the human retina. BCM results from abolished expression of green and red light-sensitive visual pigments expressed in M- and L-cones, respectively. Previously, we showed that gene augmentation therapy to deliver either human L- or M-opsin rescues dorsal M-opsin dominant cone photoreceptors structurally and functionally in treated M-opsin knockout (Opn1mw−/−) mice. Although Opn1mw−/− mice represent a disease model for BCM patients with deletion mutations, at the cellular level, dorsal cones of Opn1mw−/− mice still express low levels of S-opsin, which are different from L- and M-cones of BCM patients carrying a congenital opsin deletion. To determine whether BCM cones lacking complete opsin expression from birth would benefit from AAV-mediated gene therapy, we evaluated the outcome of gene therapy, and determined the therapeutic window and longevity of rescue in a mouse model lacking both M- and S-opsin (Opn1mw−/−/Opn1sw−/−).
Our data show that cones of Opn1mw−/−/Opn1sw−/− mice are viable at younger ages but undergo rapid degeneration. AAV-mediated expression of human L-opsin promoted cone outer segment regeneration and rescued cone-mediated function when mice were injected subretinally at 2 months of age or younger. Cone-mediated function and visually guided behavior were maintained for at least 8 months post-treatment. However, when mice were treated at 5 and 7 months of age, the chance and effectiveness of rescue was significantly reduced, although cones were still present in the retina. Crossing Opn1mw−/−/Opn1sw−/− mice with proteasomal activity reporter mice (UbG76V–GFP) did not reveal GFP accumulation in Opn1mw−/−/Opn1sw−/− cones eliminating impaired degradation of ubiquitinated proteins as stress factor contributing to cone loss. Our results demonstrate that AAV-mediated gene augmentation therapy can rescue cone structure and function in a mouse model with a congenital opsin deletion, but also emphasize the importance that early intervention is crucial for successful therapy.
Mary Ann Liebert