Gene therapy-mediated enhancement of protective protein expression for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease

•Enhancement/restoration of protective proteins as therapy for Alzheimer’s disease.•Prevention of protein aggregation.•Reduction of neuroinflammation.•Enhancing neurotrophic/neuroprotective factors.•Reducing oxidative stress.•Specific and highly regulated protein expression. Alzheimer’s disease (AD)...

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Veröffentlicht in:Brain research 2021-02, Vol.1753, p.147264-147264, Article 147264
Hauptverfasser: Owens, Lauren V., Benedetto, Alexandre, Dawson, Neil, Gaffney, Christopher J., Parkin, Edward T.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Enhancement/restoration of protective proteins as therapy for Alzheimer’s disease.•Prevention of protein aggregation.•Reduction of neuroinflammation.•Enhancing neurotrophic/neuroprotective factors.•Reducing oxidative stress.•Specific and highly regulated protein expression. Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the leading form of dementia but lacks curative treatments. Current understanding of AD aetiology attributes the development of the disease to the misfolding of two proteins; amyloid-β (Aβ) and hyperphosphorylated tau, with their pathological accumulation leading to concomitant oxidative stress, neuroinflammation, and neuronal death. These processes are regulated at multiple levels to maintain homeostasis and avert disease. However, many of the relevant regulatory proteins appear to be downregulated in the AD-afflicted brain. Enhancement/restoration of these ‘protective’ proteins, therefore, represents an attractive therapeutic avenue. Gene therapy is a desirable means of achieving this because it is not associated with the side-effects linked to systemic protein administration, and sustained protein expression virtually eliminates compliance issues. The current article represents a focused and succinct review of the better established ‘protective’ protein targets for gene therapy enhancement/restoration rather than being designed as an exhaustive review incorporating less validated protein subjects. In addition, we will discuss how the risks associated with uncontrolled or irreversible gene expression might be mitigated through combining neuronal-specific promoters, inducible expression systems and localised injections. Whilst many of the gene therapy targets reviewed herein are yet to enter clinical trials, preclinical testing has thus far demonstrated encouraging potential for the gene therapy-based treatment of AD.
ISSN:0006-8993
1872-6240
DOI:10.1016/j.brainres.2020.147264