Cochlear gene therapy restores hearing and auditory processing in an atypical DFNB9 mouse model.

IF 5.4 Q1 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
Najate Benamer, Hélène Le Ribeuz, Chloé Felgerolle, Charlotte Calvet, Olivier Postal, Baptiste Plion, Mauricio Saenz-Roldan, Marie Giorgi, Marie-José Lecomte, Yann Nguyen, Christine Petit, Nicolas Michalski, Boris Gourévitch, Omar Akil, Saaid Safieddine
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Abstract

Background: The autosomal recessive deafness 9 (DFNB9) is caused by mutations in the otoferlin gene that accounts for 2-8% of all inherited deafness cases. In a previous study, we demonstrated that Adeno-associated virus (AAV) gene therapy restored hearing in a preclinical mouse model of profound DFNB9 deafness caused by a frameshift mutation leading to a complete loss of otoferlin expression. However, it remains to be demonstrated that it can address the full spectrum of DFNB9 deafness severity, while also restoring central auditory processing essential for speech understanding.

Methods: Using homologous recombination in mouse embryonic stem cells, we created a knock-in mouse model carrying the E1799del otoferlin mutation, which mirrors the human E1804del variant linked to DFNB9 deafness, characterized by moderate-to-profound deafness during febrile episodes in affected individuals. A mixture of male and female mice was used at P2, P8, and P30. Some were followed for up to 4 months for longevity monitoring and behavioral tests.

Results: The mouse model exhibits abnormal otoferlin distribution, failure of synaptic transmission in inner hair cells, and profound hearing loss, all of which is restored to normal through AAV gene therapy. Notably, we conduct objective behavioral testing to provide the first evidence that gene therapy administered to the cochlea, which is part of the peripheral auditory system, can restore frequency discrimination, indicating the recovery of central auditory processing. This is achieved even when treatment is administered late at the end of the critical period.

Conclusions: These findings indicate that gene therapy can address the entire spectrum of DFNB9 hearing loss, and that profound deafness during critical period may not impede the restoration of central auditory processing.

耳蜗基因治疗在非典型DFNB9小鼠模型中恢复听力和听觉处理。
背景:常染色体隐性耳聋9 (DFNB9)是由otoferlin基因突变引起的,占所有遗传性耳聋病例的2-8%。在之前的一项研究中,我们证明了腺相关病毒(AAV)基因治疗可以恢复由移码突变导致otoferlin表达完全丧失引起的重度DFNB9耳聋的临床前小鼠模型的听力。然而,它仍然需要证明它可以解决DFNB9耳聋严重程度的全部范围,同时也恢复对言语理解至关重要的中央听觉处理。方法:利用小鼠胚胎干细胞的同源重组,我们建立了携带E1799del otoferlin突变的敲入小鼠模型,该突变反映了与DFNB9耳聋相关的人类E1804del变异,其特征是受影响个体在发热期出现中度至重度耳聋。在P2, P8和P30时使用雄性和雌性小鼠混合。其中一些人接受了长达4个月的寿命监测和行为测试。结果:小鼠模型出现otoferlin分布异常,内毛细胞突触传递失败,重度听力损失,经AAV基因治疗后均恢复正常。值得注意的是,我们进行了客观的行为测试,提供了第一个证据,证明对耳蜗(作为外周听觉系统的一部分)进行基因治疗可以恢复频率辨别,这表明中枢听觉加工的恢复。即使在关键期结束后才进行治疗,也能达到这一目的。结论:这些发现表明基因治疗可以解决DFNB9全谱听力损失,关键时期的深度耳聋可能不会阻碍中枢听觉加工的恢复。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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