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Publication : Growth advantage of corrected hepatocytes in a juvenile model of methylmalonic acidemia following liver directed adeno-associated viral mediated nuclease-free genome editing.

First Author  Venturoni LE Year  2022
Journal  Mol Genet Metab Volume  137
Issue  1-2 Pages  1-8
PubMed ID  35868241 Mgi Jnum  J:335004
Mgi Id  MGI:7461361 Doi  10.1016/j.ymgme.2022.06.011
Citation  Venturoni LE, et al. (2022) Growth advantage of corrected hepatocytes in a juvenile model of methylmalonic acidemia following liver directed adeno-associated viral mediated nuclease-free genome editing. Mol Genet Metab 137(1-2):1-8
abstractText  Methylmalonic acidemia (MMA) is a rare and severe inherited metabolic disease typically caused by mutations of the methylmalonyl-CoA mutase (MMUT) gene. Despite medical management, patients with MMA experience frequent episodes of metabolic instability, severe morbidity, and early mortality. In several preclinical studies, systemic gene therapy has demonstrated impressive improvement in biochemical and clinical phenotypes of MMA murine models. One approach uses a promoterless adeno-associated viral (AAV) vector that relies upon homologous recombination to achieve site-specific in vivo gene addition of MMUT into the last coding exon of albumin (Alb), generating a fused Alb-MMUT transcript after successful editing. We have previously demonstrated that nuclease-free AAV mediated Alb editing could effectively treat MMA mice in the neonatal period and noted that hepatocytes had a growth advantage after correction. Here, we use a transgenic knock-out mouse model of MMA that recapitulates severe clinical and biochemical symptoms to assess the benefits of Alb editing in juvenile animals. As was first noted in the neonatal gene therapy studies, we observe that gene edited hepatocytes in the MMA mice treated as juveniles exhibit a growth advantage, which allows them to repopulate the liver slowly but dramatically by 8-10 months post treatment, and subsequently manifest a biochemical and enzymatic response. In conclusion, our results suggest that the benefit of AAV mediated nuclease-free gene editing of the Alb locus to treat MMA could potentially be therapeutic for older patients.
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