cabp2相关性听力损失(DFNB93)是基因治疗的靶点吗?临床前进展和患者登记

IF 10.7 Q1 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
MedComm Pub Date : 2025-09-08 DOI:10.1002/mco2.70363
Barbara Vona, Bernd Wollnik, Nicola Strenzke, Tina Pangršič, Tobias Moser
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引用次数: 0

摘要

CABP2调节内毛细胞(IHCs)的突触前CaV1.3 Ca2+通道功能,并且是不知疲倦的突触声音编码所必需的。CABP2的双等位基因变异与非综合征性听力损失相关(DFNB93)。在一个意大利家庭中观察到纯合子CABP2变异的耳声发射,表明保留了外毛细胞介导的耳蜗放大。因此,DFNB93属于IHC突触受损引起的听力障碍,称为听觉突触病。DFNB93小鼠模型重现了这些发现,并证明CaBP2的缺乏通过增强CaV1.3 Ca2+通道的稳态失活来损害突触声音编码。此外,临床前研究已经证明了基因治疗的可行性。随着OTOF临床试验越来越多的证据证实突触病变是听力恢复的有希望的治疗靶点,CABP2在病毒介导的听力恢复基因治疗的候选基因中排名很高。这一观点总结了遗传性听力损失的临床前基因替代研究,并概述了使遗传靶点成为治疗发展理想的特征。它回顾了目前关于人类CABP2研究、临床前治疗发展的文献,并介绍了一个旨在支持与CABP2患者社区的研究参与的患者登记。最后,我们对CABP2基因治疗临床试验的下一步进行了展望。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Is CABP2-Associated Hearing Loss (DFNB93) a Gene Therapy Target? Preclinical Progress and Patient Registry

Is CABP2-Associated Hearing Loss (DFNB93) a Gene Therapy Target? Preclinical Progress and Patient Registry

CABP2 modulates presynaptic CaV1.3 Ca2+ channel function in inner hair cells (IHCs) and is required for indefatigable synaptic sound encoding. Biallelic variants in CABP2 are associated with non-syndromic hearing loss (DFNB93). Otoacoustic emissions have been observed in an Italian family with a homozygous CABP2 variant, indicating preservation of outer hair cell-mediated cochlear amplification. Hence, DFNB93 belongs to the hearing disorders caused by impairment of IHC synapses, termed auditory synaptopathy. DFNB93 mouse models have recapitulated findings and demonstrated that lack of CaBP2 impairs synaptic sound encoding by enhanced steady-state inactivation of CaV1.3 Ca2+ channels. Furthermore, preclinical studies have demonstrated feasibility of gene therapy. As growing evidence from OTOF clinical trials confirms synaptopathies as promising therapeutic targets for hearing restoration, CABP2 ranks highly among the candidate genes for virus-mediated gene therapy to restore hearing. This perspective summarizes the preclinical gene replacement studies for hereditary hearing loss and outlines the characteristics that make genetic targets ideal for therapy development. It reviews the current literature on human CABP2 studies, pre-clinical therapy development, and introduces a patient registry that aims to support research involvement with the CABP2 patient community. We conclude with a preview of the next steps toward CABP2 gene therapy clinical trials.

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