Preventing Photoreceptor Degeneration: The Role of ALG-2
Project Number5R03EY013705-03
Contact PI/Project LeaderPOLANS, ARTHUR S
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON
Description
Abstract Text
DESCRIPTION: (Applicant's Abstract) Eye diseases leading to retinal
degeneration are the most common cause of hereditary blindness in humans.
Prominent among these is retinitis pigmentosa (RP) affecting about 1 in 3000
people. RP consists of a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of
diseases. In more than 50% of the patients the molecular defect has not been
determined, and there is no effective treatment available.
Most forms of retinal degeneration involve the apoptosis of photoreceptor
cells. Animal models of retinal degeneration are being used to test different
strategies to either repair the genetic defect or to prevent photoreceptor cell
apoptosis. Although gene repair is at least partially effective, this strategy
is limited by the heterogeneity of the genetic defects underlying RP.
Therefore, the rescue of photoreceptor cells through the prevention of
apoptosis holds the promise of effecting multiple forms of the disease.
Ample evidence indicates that Ca++ plays a pivotal role in the apoptosis of
photoreceptor cells, but the mechanisms are unclear. Studies of ALG-2 presented
in this proposal provide an opportunity to better understand how photoreceptor
cells die and the role of Ca in this process. In addition, a gene therapy
approach targeting ALG-2 may allow disparate genetic diseases to be treated in
a single fashion.
Specific Aims Include: 1. Deliver ALG-2 ribozymes or antisense ALG-2 constructs
via an adeno-associated virus vector to photoreceptor cells of the rd/rd/tg+
mouse in order to interfere with the synthesis of ALG-2 and block apoptosis. 2.
Demonstrate that a peptide derived from the ALG-2 sequence can block the
formation of an ALG-2 dimer required for function. Vector delivery of a
construct encoding the peptide, disrupting function, will augment studies of
impaired ALG-2 synthesis and offer an alternative therapeutic approach.
No Sub Projects information available for 5R03EY013705-03
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