Engineered microRNA-based regulatory element permits safe high-dose miniMECP2 gene therapy in Rett mice

Author:

Sinnett Sarah E12ORCID,Boyle Emily1,Lyons Christopher1ORCID,Gray Steven J12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390, USA

2. Eugene McDermott Center for Human Growth and Development, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, TX 75390, USA

Abstract

Abstract MECP2 gene transfer has been shown to extend the survival of Mecp2−/y knockout mice modelling Rett syndrome, an X-linked neurodevelopmental disorder. However, controlling deleterious overexpression of MECP2 remains the critical unmet obstacle towards a safe and effective gene therapy approach for Rett syndrome. A recently developed truncated miniMECP2 gene has also been shown to be therapeutic after AAV9-mediated gene transfer in knockout neonates. We show that AAV9/miniMECP2 has a similar dose-dependent toxicity profile to that of a published second-generation AAV9/MECP2 vector after treatment in adolescent mice. To overcome that toxicity, we developed a risk-driven viral genome design strategy rooted in high-throughput profiling and genome mining to rationally develop a compact, synthetic microRNA target panel (miR-responsive auto-regulatory element, ‘miRARE’) to minimize the possibility of miniMECP2 transgene overexpression in the context of Rett syndrome gene therapy. The goal of miRARE is to have a built-in inhibitory element responsive to MECP2 overexpression. The data provided herein show that insertion of miRARE into the miniMECP2 gene expression cassette greatly improved the safety of miniMECP2 gene transfer without compromising efficacy. Importantly, this built-in regulation system does not require any additional exogenous drug application, and no miRNAs are expressed from the transgene cassette. Although broad applications of miRARE have yet to be determined, the design of miRARE suggests a potential use in gene therapy approaches for other dose-sensitive genes.

Funder

Rett Syndrome Research Trust

Mentored Training Fellowship

Taysha Gene Therapies

NCI Cancer Center

NIH

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

Reference100 articles.

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3. Development of a novel AAV gene therapy cassette with improved safety features and efficacy in a mouse model of Rett syndrome;Gadalla;Mol Ther Methods Clin Dev,2017

4. Recent endeavors in MECP2 gene transfer for gene therapy of Rett syndrome;Sinnett;Discov Med,2017

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