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    Date Issued2017 (1)2016 (1)2013 (1)AuthorGao, Guangping (3)
    Matalon, Reuben (3)
    Su, Qin (3)Ahmed, Seemin Seher (2)Denninger, Andrew R. (2)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Microbiology and Physiological Systems (3)Center for Comparative Neuroimaging, Department of Psychiatry (2)Horae Gene Therapy Center (2)Department of Medicine (1)Department of Pediatrics (1)View MoreDocument TypeJournal Article (3)KeywordGenetics (2)Psychiatry (2)Genetic Processes (1)Immunoprophylaxis and Therapy (1)Mental and Social Health (1)View MoreJournalMolecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy (2)JCI insight holds equity in the company. G. Gao and D.J. Gessler are inventors on a patent pending (PCT/US2016/058197) that is relevant to the content of this manuscript, which may result in potential royalties if granted and licensed. (1)

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    Redirecting N-acetylaspartate metabolism in the central nervous system normalizes myelination and rescues Canavan disease

    Gessler, Dominic J.; Li, Danning; Xu, Hongxia; Su, Qin; Sanmiguel, Julio; Tuncer, Serafettin; Moore, Constance M.; King, Jean A.; Matalon, Reuben; Gao, Guangping (2017-02-09)
    Canavan disease (CD) is a debilitating and lethal leukodystrophy caused by mutations in the aspartoacylase (ASPA) gene and the resulting defect in N-acetylaspartate (NAA) metabolism in the CNS and peripheral tissues. Recombinant adeno-associated virus (rAAV) has the ability to cross the blood-brain barrier and widely transduce the CNS. We developed a rAAV-based and optimized gene replacement therapy, which achieves early, complete, and sustained rescue of the lethal disease phenotype in CD mice. Our treatment results in a super-mouse phenotype, increasing motor performance of treated CD mice beyond that of WT control mice. We demonstrate that this rescue is oligodendrocyte independent, and that gene correction in astrocytes is sufficient, suggesting that the establishment of an astrocyte-based alternative metabolic sink for NAA is a key mechanism for efficacious disease rescue and the super-mouse phenotype. Importantly, the use of clinically translatable high-field imaging tools enables the noninvasive monitoring and prediction of therapeutic outcomes for CD and might enable further investigation of NAA-related cognitive function.
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    rAAV Gene Therapy in a Canavan's Disease Mouse Model Reveals Immune Impairments and an Extended Pathology Beyond the Central Nervous System

    Ahmed, Seemin Seher; Schattgen, Stefan A.; Frakes, Ashley E.; Sikoglu, Elif M.; Su, Qin; Li, Jia; Hampton, Thomas G.; Denninger, Andrew R.; Kirschner, Daniel A.; Kaspar, Brian; et al. (2016-06-01)
    Aspartoacylase (AspA) gene mutations cause the pediatric lethal neurodegenerative Canavan disease (CD). There is emerging promise of successful gene therapy for CD using recombinant adeno-associated viruses (rAAVs). Here, we report an intracerebroventricularly delivered AspA gene therapy regime using three serotypes of rAAVs at a 20-fold reduced dose than previously described in AspA(-/-) mice, a bona-fide mouse model of CD. Interestingly, central nervous system (CNS)-restricted therapy prolonged survival over systemic therapy in CD mice but failed to sustain motor functions seen in systemically treated mice. Importantly, we reveal through histological and functional examination of untreated CD mice that AspA deficiency in peripheral tissues causes morphological and functional abnormalities in this heretofore CNS-defined disorder. We demonstrate for the first time that AspA deficiency, possibly through excessive N-acetyl aspartic acid accumulation, elicits both a peripheral and CNS immune response in CD mice. Our data establish a role for peripheral tissues in CD pathology and serve to aid the development of more efficacious and sustained gene therapy for this disease.
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    A single intravenous rAAV injection as late as P20 achieves efficacious and sustained CNS Gene therapy in canavan mice

    Ahmed, Seemin Seher; Li, Huapeng; Cao, Chunyan; Sikoglu, Elif M.; Denninger, Andrew R.; Su, Qin; Eaton, Samuel; Liso Navarro, Ana A.; Xie, Jun; Szucs, Sylvia; et al. (2013-12-01)
    Canavan's disease (CD) is a fatal pediatric leukodystrophy caused by mutations in aspartoacylase (AspA) gene. Currently, there is no effective treatment for CD; however, gene therapy is an attractive approach to ameliorate the disease. Here, we studied progressive neuropathology and gene therapy in short-lived (≤ 1 month) AspA(-/-) mice, a bona-fide animal model for the severest form of CD. Single intravenous (IV) injections of several primate-derived recombinant adeno-associated viruses (rAAVs) as late as postnatal day 20 (P20) completely rescued their early lethality and alleviated the major disease symptoms, extending survival in P0-injected rAAV9 and rAAVrh8 groups to as long as 2 years thus far. We successfully used microRNA (miRNA)-mediated post-transcriptional detargeting for the first time to restrict therapeutic rAAV expression in the central nervous system (CNS) and minimize potentially deleterious effects of transgene overexpression in peripheral tissues. rAAV treatment globally improved CNS myelination, although some abnormalities persisted in the content and distribution of myelin-specific and -enriched lipids. We demonstrate that systemically delivered and CNS-restricted rAAVs can serve as efficacious and sustained gene therapeutics in a model of a severe neurodegenerative disorder even when administered as late as P20.
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