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Wednesday, November 21, 2007 : 0245 Hrs

Sci. & Tech.
Gene therapy safety trial for childhood blindness under way

GAINESVILLE: Three decades have passed since gene therapy pioneer William W. 
Hauswirth, Ph.D., and his colleagues at the University of Florida began work
on a virus that could safely deliver corrective genes into living animals.

It's been six years since a multi-university team used gene therapy to give 
sight to puppies born with a defect that causes blindness, according to 
Eurekalert,
the news service of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

Now the gene-transfer technique is being tested for safety in people in a phase 
1 clinical research study conducted by the University of Pennsylvania and
the University of Florida with support from the National Eye Institute of the 
National Institutes of Health.

A young adult with a form of hereditary blindness called Leber congenital 
amaurosis type 2, or LCA2, received an injection of trillions of replacement 
genes
into the retina of one eye this month, making the volunteer one of the first 
people in the world to undergo the procedure. Shalesh Kaushal, M.D., Ph.D.,
an assistant professor of ophthalmology at UF, performed the gene transfer.

The volunteer was discharged last week from the General Clinical Research 
Center at UF.

In all, six adults and then three children between the ages of 8 and 17 will 
undergo the gene-transfer procedure at UF over the next year or more before
safety data are fully evaluated. Names are not being disclosed for privacy 
reasons. Potential risks are discussed with prospective participants as part
of an extensive screening and informed consent process.

"This is the first study of its kind to investigate inherited blindness," said 
Barry J. Byrne, M.D., Ph.D., a professor of molecular genetics and microbiology
and director of UF's Powell Gene Therapy Center. "The accomplishment reflects a 
great deal of work and dedication on the part of Dr. Hauswirth, as well
as many other scientists and physicians, including Samuel G. Jacobson, M.D. 
Ph.D., professor of ophthalmology of the University of Pennsylvania, and 
literally
dozens of people who were involved in manufacturing and safety testing the gene 
transfer agent here at UF."

Hauswirth and Jacobson - the trial's principal investigator - were among a 
multicenter team of NEI-supported clinicians and scientists that first 
established
proof-of-concept for gene transfer for LCA in rodent models of the disease and 
in a breed of vision-impaired dogs called Briards. Restoration of visual
function in dogs occurred in 2001 and has been described as remarkable and 
long-lasting.

Six years have gone by since the Briard puppies - "Lancelot" was the breakout 
star, going on to shake paws with lawmakers on Capitol Hill - acquired sight.

"The idea of the therapy is simple," said Hauswirth, UF's Rybaczki-Bullard 
professor of ophthalmic molecular genetics. "If cells are missing a gene for
a vital function, such as vision, the therapy is to replace that gene."

After rigorous preclinical safety studies in animals, including demonstrating 
the safety of the procedure in non-human primates, the investigators began
a human clinical trial.

The effort involved intense collaboration with several investigators playing 
major roles, according to Jacobson. A short list of the key clinicians and
scientists from Penn includes Artur V. Cideciyan, Ph.D., a research associate 
professor, and Tomas S. Aleman, M.D., a research assistant professor, both
from the department of ophthalmology.

In LCA-type diseases, photoreceptor cells are unable to respond to light. NEI 
and NEI-supported researchers have found that LCA2 is caused by mutations
in the RPE65 gene, which produces a protein with the same name that is vital 
for vision. This trial will evaluate the use of a modified adeno-associated
virus - an apparently harmless virus that already exists in most people - to 
deliver RPE65 to the retina.

"Viruses have evolved a way to get into cells very efficiently, more 
efficiently than anything else we know to deliver a piece of genetic material 
to a
cell," Hauswirth said. "So all we're doing is using evolution to our advantage 
- in this case, to deliver our therapeutic gene."

Instrumental in developing the first gene-carrying adeno-associated vectors 
were eminent scholar Nicholas Muzyczka, Ph.D., a professor of molecular genetics
and microbiology at UF, and Kenneth Berns, M.D., Ph.D., director of the UF 
Genetics Institute. In 1992 Muzyczka and Berns patented a form of the 
adeno-associated
virus capable of introducing foreign DNA into mammalian cells. Terence Flotte, 
M.D., former chairman of UF's department of pediatrics and the current dean
of the School of Medicine at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, 
was instrumental in the early organization of the trial. Byrne is the principal
investigator at UF.

The actual medical technique used to transfer the gene is not unusual, said 
Kaushal, who directs the vitreoretinal service in the UF College of Medicine.

"The procedure involves two incisions that give the surgeon access to the 
surface of the retina," Kaushal said. "Then, fluid containing the virus is 
injected
with a syringe and it creates a bubble. The virus will then be taken up by the 
photoreceptor cells and the retinal pigment epithelial cells and will 
theoretically
produce the protein that these patients are missing."

LCA2 affects about 2,000 people in the United States and is one of several 
incurable forms of blindness collectively known as retinitis pigmentosa, which
in turn affects about 200,000 Americans.

Children with LCA2 experience major visual disability that can lead to total 
vision loss in adulthood. Although vision loss is severe, the structure of
the retina - including its connection to the brain - can remain relatively 
intact for decades before the photoreceptor 
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