An AAV capsid reprogrammed to bind human transferrin receptor mediates brain-wide gene delivery.

Qin Huang,Ken Y Chan,Jason Wu, Nuria R Botticello-Romero,Qingxia Zheng, Shan Lou, Casey Keyes, Alexander Svanbergsson, Jencilin Johnston, Allan Mills, Chin-Yen Lin, Pamela P Brauer,Gabrielle Clouse,Simon Pacouret, John W Harvey,Thomas Beddow, Jenna K Hurley, Isabelle G Tobey,Megan Powell,Albert T Chen,Andrew J Barry,Fatma-Elzahraa Eid,Yujia A Chan,Benjamin E Deverman

Science (New York, N.Y.)(2024)

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摘要
Developing vehicles that efficiently deliver genes throughout the human central nervous system (CNS) will broaden the range of treatable genetic diseases. We engineered an adeno-associated virus (AAV) capsid, BI-hTFR1, that binds human transferrin receptor (TfR1), a protein expressed on the blood-brain barrier (BBB). BI-hTFR1 was actively transported across human brain endothelial cells and, relative to AAV9, provided 40-50 times greater reporter expression in the CNS of human TFRC knock-in mice. The enhanced tropism was CNS-specific and absent in wild type mice. When used to deliver GBA1, mutations of which cause Gaucher disease and are linked to Parkinson's disease, BI-hTFR1 substantially increased brain and cerebrospinal fluid glucocerebrosidase activity compared to AAV9. These findings establish BI-hTFR1 as a potential vector for human CNS gene therapy.
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