Binocular Benefit Following Monocular Subretinal AAV Injection in a Mouse Model of Autosomal Dominant Retinitis Pigmentosa (adRP)

2021 
Autosomal dominant retinitis pigmentosa (adRP) is frequently caused by mutations in RHO, the gene for rhodopsin. In previous experiments in dogs with the T4R mutation in RHO, an AAV2/5 vector expressing both an shRNA directed to human and dog RHO mRNA and an shRNA-resistant human RHO cDNA (AAV-RHO820-shRNA820) prevented retinal degeneration for more than 8 months following injection. To confirm that this same vector could protect the retinas of a different species and bearing a different RHO mutation, we injected mice transgenic for human P23H RHO at postnatal day 30 in one eye. For nine months, we monitored their retinal structure using spectral-domain optical coherence tomography (SD-OCT) and retinal function using electroretinography (ERG). We compared these to P23H RHO transgenic mice injected with AAV-GFP. Though retinas continued to thin over time, compared to control injected eyes, AAV-RHO820-shRNA820 slowed the loss of photoreceptor cells and decreased ERG amplitudes in AAV-RHO820-shRNA820 eyes during the nine-month study period. Unexpectedly, we also observed preservation of retinal structure and function in the untreated contralateral eyes of AAV-RHO820-shRNA820 treated mice. PCR analysis and western blots provided evidence that a low amount of vector from injected eyes was present in uninjected eyes.
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