Safe and neuroprotective vectors for long-term traumatic brain injury gene therapy.
Daniela Blanco-OcampoFabio Andrés CawenLuis Angel Álamo-PindadoMaría Luciana Negro-DemontelHugo PeluffoPublished in: Gene therapy (2019)
Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a complex and progressive brain injury with no approved treatments that needs both short- and long-term therapeutic strategies to cope with the variety of physiopathological mechanisms involved. In particular, neuroinflammation is a key process modulating TBI outcome, and the potentiation of these mechanisms by pro-inflammatory gene therapy vectors could contribute to the injury progression. Here, we evaluate in the controlled cortical impact model of TBI, the safety of integrative-deficient lentiviral vectors (IDLVs) or the non-viral HNRK recombinant modular protein/DNA nanovector. These two promising vectors display different tropisms, transduction efficiencies, short- or long-term transduction or inflammatory activation profile. We show that the brain intraparenchymal injection of these vectors overexpressing green fluorescent protein after a CCI is not neurotoxic, and interestingly, can decrease the short-term sensory neurological deficits, and diminish the brain tissue loss at 90 days post lesion (dpl). Moreover, only IDLVs were able to mitigate the memory deficits elicited by a CCI. These vectors did not alter the microglial or astroglial reactivity at 90 dpl, suggesting that they do not potentiate the on-going neuroinflammation. Taken together, these data suggest that both types of vectors could be interesting tools for the design of gene therapy strategies targeting immediate or long-term neuropathological mechanisms of TBI.
Keyphrases
- gene therapy
- traumatic brain injury
- brain injury
- cerebral ischemia
- severe traumatic brain injury
- neuropathic pain
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- sars cov
- white matter
- multiple sclerosis
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- spinal cord
- resting state
- lps induced
- oxidative stress
- functional connectivity
- deep learning
- cell free
- big data
- cancer therapy
- spinal cord injury
- mild traumatic brain injury
- circulating tumor
- drug administration