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AAV-Mediated TAZ Gene Replacement Restores Mitochondrial and Cardioskeletal Function in Barth Syndrome

Publication ,  Journal Article
Suzuki-Hatano, S; Saha, M; Rizzo, SA; Witko, RL; Gosiker, BJ; Ramanathan, M; Soustek, MS; Jones, MD; Kang, PB; Byrne, BJ; Cade, WT; Pacak, CA
Published in: Human Gene Therapy
February 2019

Barth syndrome (BTHS) is a rare mitochondrial disease that affects heart and skeletal muscle and has no curative treatment. It is caused by recessive mutations in the X-linked gene , which encodes tafazzin. To develop a clinically relevant gene therapy to restore tafazzin function and treat BTHS, three different adeno-associated virus serotype 9 vectors were tested and compared to identify the optimal promoter—cytomegalovirus (CMV), desmin (Des), or a native tafazzin promoter (Taz)—for expression following intravenous administration of 1 × 10 vector genomes/kilogram to a mouse model of BTHS as either neonates (1–2 days of age) or adults (3 months of age). At 5 months of age, evaluations of biodistribution and expression levels, mouse activity assessments, fatigue in response to exercise, muscle strength, cardiac function, mitochondrial structure, oxygen consumption, and electron transport chain complex activity assays were performed to measure the extent of improvement in treated mice. Each promoter was scored for significant improvement over untreated control mice and significant improvement compared with the other two promoters for every measurement and within each age of administration. All three of the promoters resulted in significant improvements in a majority of the assessments compared with untreated BTHS controls. When scored for overall effectiveness as a gene therapy, the Des promoter was found to provide improvement in the most assessments, followed by the CMV promoter, and finally Taz regardless of injection age. This study provides substantial support for translation of an adeno-associated virus serotype 9–mediated gene replacement strategy using a Des promoter for human BTHS patients in the clinic.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Human Gene Therapy

DOI

EISSN

1557-7422

ISSN

1043-0342

Publication Date

February 2019

Volume

30

Issue

2

Start / End Page

139 / 154

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Related Subject Headings

  • Biotechnology
  • 3206 Medical biotechnology
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
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Suzuki-Hatano, S., Saha, M., Rizzo, S. A., Witko, R. L., Gosiker, B. J., Ramanathan, M., … Pacak, C. A. (2019). AAV-Mediated TAZ Gene Replacement Restores Mitochondrial and Cardioskeletal Function in Barth Syndrome. Human Gene Therapy, 30(2), 139–154. https://doi.org/10.1089/hum.2018.020
Suzuki-Hatano, Silveli, Madhurima Saha, Skylar A. Rizzo, Rachael L. Witko, Bennett J. Gosiker, Manashwi Ramanathan, Meghan S. Soustek, et al. “AAV-Mediated TAZ Gene Replacement Restores Mitochondrial and Cardioskeletal Function in Barth Syndrome.” Human Gene Therapy 30, no. 2 (February 2019): 139–54. https://doi.org/10.1089/hum.2018.020.
Suzuki-Hatano S, Saha M, Rizzo SA, Witko RL, Gosiker BJ, Ramanathan M, et al. AAV-Mediated TAZ Gene Replacement Restores Mitochondrial and Cardioskeletal Function in Barth Syndrome. Human Gene Therapy. 2019 Feb;30(2):139–54.
Suzuki-Hatano, Silveli, et al. “AAV-Mediated TAZ Gene Replacement Restores Mitochondrial and Cardioskeletal Function in Barth Syndrome.” Human Gene Therapy, vol. 30, no. 2, SAGE Publications, Feb. 2019, pp. 139–54. Crossref, doi:10.1089/hum.2018.020.
Suzuki-Hatano S, Saha M, Rizzo SA, Witko RL, Gosiker BJ, Ramanathan M, Soustek MS, Jones MD, Kang PB, Byrne BJ, Cade WT, Pacak CA. AAV-Mediated TAZ Gene Replacement Restores Mitochondrial and Cardioskeletal Function in Barth Syndrome. Human Gene Therapy. SAGE Publications; 2019 Feb;30(2):139–154.
Journal cover image

Published In

Human Gene Therapy

DOI

EISSN

1557-7422

ISSN

1043-0342

Publication Date

February 2019

Volume

30

Issue

2

Start / End Page

139 / 154

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Related Subject Headings

  • Biotechnology
  • 3206 Medical biotechnology