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Gene Therapy Restores Balance and Auditory Functions in a Mouse Model of Usher Syndrome
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Gene Therapy Restores Balance and Auditory Functions in a Mouse Model of Usher Syndrome

Kevin Isgrig, Jack W Shteamer, Inna A Belyantseva, Meghan C Drummond, Tracy S Fitzgerald, Sarath Vijayakumar, Sherri M Jones, Andrew J Griffith, Thomas B Friedman, Lisa L Cunningham, …
Molecular therapy, Vol.25(3), pp.780-791
03/01/2017
PMID: 28254438

Abstract

Animals Behavior, Animal Disease Models, Animal Gene Expression Genetic Therapy Hair Cells, Auditory, Inner - metabolism Hair Cells, Auditory, Inner - ultrastructure Hearing - genetics Hearing Tests Humans Membrane Proteins - genetics Mice Mice, Knockout Phenotype Postural Balance - genetics Stereocilia - metabolism Stereocilia - ultrastructure Usher Syndromes - genetics Usher Syndromes - physiopathology Usher Syndromes - therapy
Dizziness and hearing loss are among the most common disabilities. Many forms of hereditary balance and hearing disorders are caused by abnormal development of stereocilia, mechanosensory organelles on the apical surface of hair cells in the inner ear. The deaf whirler mouse, a model of human Usher syndrome (manifested by hearing loss, dizziness, and blindness), has a recessive mutation in the whirlin gene, which renders hair cell stereocilia short and dysfunctional. In this study, wild-type whirlin cDNA was delivered to the inner ears of neonatal whirler mice using adeno-associated virus serotype 2/8 (AAV8-whirlin) by injection into the posterior semicircular canal. Unilateral whirlin gene therapy injection was able to restore balance function as well as improve hearing in whirler mice for at least 4 months. Our data indicate that gene therapy is likely to become a treatment option for hereditary disorders of balance and hearing.
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https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ymthe.2017.01.007View
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