Lumbar puncture (LP) is an attractive route for delivering novel therapies to the nervous system because it is safe in patients;performed at the bedside;and FDA-approved for conventional drugs. However, its use for gene delivery has to date been ineffective;has not met safety principles;and has failed to target neurons. We have developed highly effective gene transfer to the primary sensory neurons of the dorsal root ganglia (DRGs) via LP, i.e. intrathecally (IT), using self-complementary recombinant adeno-associated virus serotype 8 (sc-rAAV8). A single administration of sc-rAAV8 expressing the analgesic gene prepro-?-endorphin (pp?EP) or a mutant form of the rat anti- inflammatory gene interleukin-10 (rIL10/F129S) led to highly significant (p<0.0001) relief of symptoms for =3 months in a rat chronic neuropathic pain model, an important functional outcome. The hypothesis of this application is that sc-rAAV8 via LP is a viable gene delivery product for intractable chronic pain usable by clinicians outside of specialized research centers. In order to investigate/establish the potential for clinical translation, we propose the following Specific Aims:
Aim 1. To quantify DRG transduction by stereology in the """"""""closed"""""""" vs. """"""""open"""""""" IT space, characterize serological immunity to the IT vector, and determine organ distribution.
Aim 2. To identify the strongest candidate therapeutic gene in the neuropathic pain model and to define if there is pharmacological synergy with conventional pain treatments.
Aim 3. To test the antinociceptive efficacy of the approach in a new rat model reflecting pain in patients with incurable cancer, a possible future clinical trial-scenario.
Aim 4. To test if IT sc-rAAV8 effectively transduces DRG neurons in large animals. Significance &future perspective: Chronic pain affects 50 million Americans and incurs costs of >$100 billion/year in the US alone (as stated in PA-07-282). This application proposes a gene therapy approach, which, if the Research Plan succeeds, will become a candidate for clinical development in patients with severe pain from advanced malignancies. IT sc-rAAV8 may serve as a tool for proof-of-mechanism trials, e.g. to validate microglial activation as therapeutic target in humans, and may also become a new drug for otherwise intractable chronic pain. Public Health Relevance: Chronic pain affects 50 million Americans and incurs costs of >$100 billion/year in the US alone (as stated in PA-07-282). Spinal tap is an attractive route for delivering novel therapies to the nervous system for a variety of diseases but particularly for pain. The reason is that the spinal cord functions as a """"""""pain gate"""""""" able to open wide and thereby to facilitate pain signal transfer or to """"""""close"""""""" and thereby control pain. A spinal tap is is safe in patients;performed at the bedside;and FDA-approved for conventional drugs. We have developed a gene therapy method administering new gene vectors by spinal tap, which control pain. Specifically, we find in a rat model that a severe type of pain, chronic neuropathic pain can be controlled for >3 months by our approach. In the research proposed in this application, we wish to study and improve our approach further in order to evaluate, whether it is a viable treatment approach for future development for human use with a special focus on severe pain from advanced cancer.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01NS063022-04
Application #
8049101
Study Section
Gene and Drug Delivery Systems Study Section (GDD)
Program Officer
Porter, Linda L
Project Start
2009-02-16
Project End
2014-01-31
Budget Start
2011-02-01
Budget End
2012-01-31
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
2011
Total Cost
$441,991
Indirect Cost
Name
Mayo Clinic, Rochester
Department
Type
DUNS #
006471700
City
Rochester
State
MN
Country
United States
Zip Code
55905
Unger, Mark D; Pleticha, Josef; Heilmann, Lukas F et al. (2018) Human interleukin-10 delivered intrathecally by self-complementary adeno-associated virus 8 induces xenogeneic transgene immunity without clinical neurotoxicity in swine. J Gene Med 20:e3026
Unger, Mark D; Pleticha, Josef; Collins, James E et al. (2017) Fatal Meningitis in Swine after Intrathecal Administration of Adeno-associated Virus Expressing Syngeneic Interleukin-10. Mol Ther 25:2526-2532
Pleticha, Josef; Maus, Timothy P; Beutler, Andreas S (2016) Future Directions in Pain Management: Integrating Anatomically Selective Delivery Techniques With Novel Molecularly Selective Agents. Mayo Clin Proc 91:522-33
Pleticha, J; Malkmus, S A; Heilmann, L F et al. (2015) High cerebrospinal fluid levels of interleukin-10 attained by AAV in dogs. Gene Ther 22:202-8
Pleticha, Josef; Jeng-Singh, Christian; Rezek, Rahaf et al. (2014) Intraneural convection enhanced delivery of AAVrh20 for targeting primary sensory neurons. Mol Cell Neurosci 60:72-80
Beutler, Andreas S; Kulkarni, Amit A; Kanwar, Rahul et al. (2014) Sequencing of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease genes in a toxic polyneuropathy. Ann Neurol 76:727-37
Pleticha, Josef; Maus, Timothy P; Christner, Jodie A et al. (2014) Minimally invasive convection-enhanced delivery of biologics into dorsal root ganglia: validation in the pig model and prospective modeling in humans. Technical note. J Neurosurg 121:851-8
Hartung, Theresa; Zhang, Lu; Kanwar, Rahul et al. (2012) Diametrically opposite methylome-transcriptome relationships in high- and low-CpG promoter genes in postmitotic neural rat tissue. Epigenetics 7:421-8
Beutler, Andreas S (2010) AAV provides an alternative for gene therapy of the peripheral sensory nervous system. Mol Ther 18:670-3
Hammer, Paul; Banck, Michaela S; Amberg, Ronny et al. (2010) mRNA-seq with agnostic splice site discovery for nervous system transcriptomics tested in chronic pain. Genome Res 20:847-60

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