Roy C Levitt, Munal B Kandel, Gerald Z Zhuang, William F Goins, Konstantinos D Sarantopoulos, Joseph C Glorioso
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Chronic pain remains a global health challenge, often resistant to available treatments with socioeconomic and psychological burdens. All chronic pain is believed due to neuronal signaling imbalances, resulting in increased excitability. Gene therapy represents a promising molecular therapy targeting molecular pain processing pathways, by offering precise, localized, long-lasting neuromodulation while minimizing systemic exposure and side effects. In model systems, replication-defective, disease-free, herpes simplex virus (rdHSV) gene therapy expressing an analgesic carbonic anhydrase-8 (CA8∗) peptide variant corrects somatosensory hyperexcitability by activating Kv7 voltage-gated potassium channels, produces profound, long-lasting analgesia and treats chronic pain from knee osteoarthritis (OA). In these studies, we provide the first non-glucagon-like peptide (GLP) biosafety, efficacy, biodistribution, shedding, and histopathology examination of this rdHSV-CA8∗. Naive mice were examined for clinical safety, biodistribution across all major tissues, knee histopathology, and analgesic efficacy via the intra-articular knee route of administration. We observed no signs of persistent toxicity, viral genomes remained where they were injected, and there was no evidence of shedding. Profound analgesia persisted for 6 months without functional impairments. These initial biosafety and efficacy data support further development of rdHSV-CA8∗ for treating chronic knee pain due to moderate to severe OA.
期刊介绍:
Molecular Therapy is the leading journal for research in gene transfer, vector development, stem cell manipulation, and therapeutic interventions. It covers a broad spectrum of topics including genetic and acquired disease correction, vaccine development, pre-clinical validation, safety/efficacy studies, and clinical trials. With a focus on advancing genetics, medicine, and biotechnology, Molecular Therapy publishes peer-reviewed research, reviews, and commentaries to showcase the latest advancements in the field. With an impressive impact factor of 12.4 in 2022, it continues to attract top-tier contributions.