JCI Insight (Aug 2023)

AAV-mediated delivery of secreted acid α-glucosidase with enhanced uptake corrects neuromuscular pathology in Pompe mice

  • Naresh K. Meena,
  • Davide Randazzo,
  • Nina Raben,
  • Rosa Puertollano

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 16

Abstract

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Gene therapy is under advanced clinical development for several lysosomal storage disorders. Pompe disease, a debilitating neuromuscular illness affecting infants, children, and adults with different severity, is caused by a deficiency of lysosomal glycogen-degrading enzyme acid α-glucosidase (GAA). Here, we demonstrated that adeno-associated virus–mediated (AAV-mediated) systemic gene transfer reversed glycogen storage in all key therapeutic targets — skeletal and cardiac muscles, the diaphragm, and the central nervous system — in both young and severely affected old Gaa-knockout mice. Furthermore, the therapy reversed secondary cellular abnormalities in skeletal muscle, such as those in autophagy and mTORC1/AMPK signaling. We used an AAV9 vector encoding a chimeric human GAA protein with enhanced uptake and secretion to facilitate efficient spread of the expressed protein among multiple target tissues. These results lay the groundwork for a future clinical development strategy in Pompe disease.

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