Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10834443 | Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2008 | 12 Pages |
Abstract
Classical late-infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (LINCL) is a hereditary neurodegenerative disease of childhood that is caused by mutations in the gene (CLN2) encoding the lysosomal protease tripeptidyl-peptidase I (TPPI). LINCL is fatal and there is no treatment of demonstrated efficacy in affected children but preclinical studies with AAV-mediated gene therapy have demonstrated promise in a mouse model. Here, we have generated mouse CLN2-mutants that express different amounts of TPPI activity to benchmark levels required for therapeutic benefits. Approximately 3% of normal TPPI activity in brain delayed disease onset and doubled lifespan to a median of â¼9 months compared to mice expressing â¼0.2% of normal levels. Expression of 6% of normal TPPI activity dramatically attenuated disease, with a median lifespan of â¼20 months which approaches that of unaffected mice. While the lifespan of this hypomorph is shortened, disease is late-onset, less severe and progresses slowly compared to mice expressing lower TPPI levels. For gene therapy and other approaches that restore enzyme activity, these results suggest that 6% of normal TPPI activity throughout the CNS of affected individuals will provide a significant therapeutic benefit but higher levels will be required to cure this disease.
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Authors
David E. Sleat, Mukarram El-Banna, Istvan Sohar, Kwi-Hye Kim, Kostantin Dobrenis, Steven U. Walkley, Peter Lobel,