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      Post-mortem assessment of the short and long-term effects of the trophic factor neurturin in patients with α-synucleinopathies.

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          Abstract

          Substantial interest persists for developing neurotrophic factors to treat neurodegenerative diseases. At the same time, significant progress has been made in implementing gene therapy as a means to provide long-term expression of bioactive neurotrophic factors to targeted sites in the brain. Nonetheless, to date, no double-blind clinical trial has achieved positive results on its primary endpoint despite robust benefits achieved in animal models. A major issue with advancing the field is the paucity of information regarding the expression and effects of neurotrophic factors in human neurodegenerative brain, relative to the well-characterized responses in animal models. To help fill this information void, we examined post-mortem brain tissue from four patients with nigrostriatal degeneration who had participated in clinical trials testing gene delivery of neurturin to the putamen of patients. Each had died of unrelated causes ranging from 1.5-to-3-months (2 Parkinson's disease patients), to 4+-years (1 Parkinson's disease and 1 multiple-system atrophy-parkinsonian type patient) following gene therapy. Quantitative and immunohistochemical evaluation of neurturin, alpha-synuclein, tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and an oligodendroglia marker (Olig 2) were performed in each brain. Comparable volumes-of-expression of neurturin were seen in the putamen in all cases (~15-22%; mean=18.5%). TH-signal in the putamen was extremely sparse in the shorter-term cases. A 6-fold increase was seen in longer-term cases, but was far less than achieved in animal models of nigrostriatal degeneration with similar or even far less NRTN exposure. Less than 1% of substantia nigra (SN) neurons stained for neurturin in the shorter-term cases. A 15-fold increase was seen in the longer-term cases, but neurturin was still only detected in ~5% of nigral cells. These data provide unique insight into the functional status of advanced, chronic nigrostriatal degeneration in human brain and the response of these neurons to neurotrophic factor stimulation. They demonstrate mild but persistent expression of gene-mediated neurturin over 4-years, with an apparent, time-related amplification of its transport and biological effects, albeit quite weak, and provide unique information to help plan and design future trials.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Neurobiol. Dis.
          Neurobiology of disease
          Elsevier BV
          1095-953X
          0969-9961
          Jun 2015
          : 78
          Affiliations
          [1 ] RTBioconsultants, Inc., San Diego, CA, USA; Ceregene, Inc, USA. Electronic address: bartus@RTBioconsultants.com.
          [2 ] Rush Presbyterian Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USA.
          [3 ] Washington University Medical School, St. Louis, MO, USA.
          [4 ] Ceregene, Inc, USA.
          [5 ] Isis Pharmaceuticals, Carlsbad, CA, USA; Ceregene, Inc, USA.
          [6 ] Toronto Western Hospital, Toronto, Canada.
          [7 ] Mount Sinai School of Medicine, NYC, USA.
          Article
          S0969-9961(15)00095-9
          10.1016/j.nbd.2015.03.023
          25841760
          8af00dab-5aa9-4f26-8901-b54c3d409214
          History

          AAV2,AAV2 antibodies (Ab),Alpha-synuclein,Axonal transport deficiency,Gene therapy,Neurotrophic factors,Parkinson's disease,Synucleinopathies

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