EMBO Molecular Medicine (Apr 2013)

A highly secreted sulphamidase engineered to cross the blood‐brain barrier corrects brain lesions of mice with mucopolysaccharidoses type IIIA

  • Nicolina Cristina Sorrentino,
  • Luca D'Orsi,
  • Irene Sambri,
  • Edoardo Nusco,
  • Ciro Monaco,
  • Carmine Spampanato,
  • Elena Polishchuk,
  • Paola Saccone,
  • Elvira De Leonibus,
  • Andrea Ballabio,
  • Alessandro Fraldi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/emmm.201202083
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 5
pp. 675 – 690

Abstract

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Abstract Mucopolysaccharidoses type IIIA (MPS‐IIIA) is a neurodegenerative lysosomal storage disorder (LSD) caused by inherited defects of the sulphamidase gene. Here, we used a systemic gene transfer approach to demonstrate the therapeutic efficacy of a chimeric sulphamidase, which was engineered by adding the signal peptide (sp) from the highly secreted iduronate‐2‐sulphatase (IDS) and the blood‐brain barrier (BBB)‐binding domain (BD) from the Apolipoprotein B (ApoB‐BD). A single intravascular administration of AAV2/8 carrying the modified sulphamidase was performed in adult MPS‐IIIA mice in order to target the liver and convert it to a factory organ for sustained systemic release of the modified sulphamidase. We showed that while the IDS sp replacement results in increased enzyme secretion, the addition of the ApoB‐BD allows efficient BBB transcytosis and restoration of sulphamidase activity in the brain of treated mice. This, in turn, resulted in an overall improvement of brain pathology and recovery of a normal behavioural phenotype. Our results provide a novel feasible strategy to develop minimally invasive therapies for the treatment of brain pathology in MPS‐IIIA and other neurodegenerative LSDs. →See accompanying article emmm.201302668

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