Endothelial and neuronal engagement by AAV-BR1 gene therapy alleviates neurological symptoms and lipid deposition in a mouse model of Niemann-Pick type C2

Charlotte Laurfelt Munch Rasmussen, Signe Frost Frederiksen, Christian Würtz Heegaard, Maj Schneider Thomsen, Eva Hede, Bartosz Laczek, Jakob Körbelin, Daniel Wüstner, Louiza Bohn Thomsen, Markus Schwaninger, Ole N. Jensen, Torben Moos, Annette Burkhart*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

Background: Patients with the genetic disorder Niemann-Pick type C2 disease (NP-C2) suffer from lysosomal accumulation of cholesterol causing both systemic and severe neurological symptoms. In a murine NP-C2 model, otherwise successful intravenous Niemann-Pick C2 protein (NPC2) replacement therapy fails to alleviate progressive neurodegeneration as infused NPC2 cannot cross the blood–brain barrier (BBB). Genetic modification of brain endothelial cells (BECs) is thought to enable secretion of recombinant proteins thereby overcoming the restrictions of the BBB. We hypothesized that an adeno-associated virus (AAV-BR1) encoding the Npc2 gene could cure neurological symptoms in Npc2−/− mice through transduction of BECs, and possibly neurons via viral passage across the BBB. Methods: Six weeks old Npc2−/− mice were intravenously injected with the AAV-BR1-NPC2 vector. Composite phenotype scores and behavioral tests were assessed for the following 6 weeks and visually documented. Post-mortem analyses included gene expression analyses, verification of neurodegeneration in Purkinje cells, determination of NPC2 transduction in the CNS, assessment of gliosis, quantification of gangliosides, and co-detection of cholesterol with NPC2 in degenerating neurons. Results: Treatment with the AAV-BR1-NPC2 vector improved motor functions, reduced neocortical inflammation, and preserved Purkinje cells in most of the mice, referred to as high responders. The vector exerted tropism for BECs and neurons resulting in a widespread NPC2 distribution in the brain with a concomitant reduction of cholesterol in adjacent neurons, presumably not transduced by the vector. Mass spectrometry imaging revealed distinct lipid alterations in the brains of Npc2−/− mice, with increased GM2 and GM3 ganglioside accumulation in the cerebellum and hippocampus. AAV-BR1-NPC2 treatment partially normalized these ganglioside distributions in high responders, including restoration of lipid profiles towards those of Npc2+/+ controls. Conclusion: The data suggests cross-correcting gene therapy to the brain via delivery of NPC2 from BECs and neurons.

Original languageEnglish
Article number13
JournalFluids and Barriers of the CNS
Volume22
Issue number1
Number of pages28
ISSN2045-8118
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

Keywords

  • AAV-BR1
  • Blood–brain barrier
  • Cholesterol
  • Cross-correction
  • Gangliosides
  • Niemann-Pick type C2 disease
  • NPC2
  • Viral gene therapy

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