Extent of genetic and epigenetic factor reprogramming via a single viral vector construct in deaf adult mice

dc.contributor.authorNiliksha Gunewardene
dc.contributor.authorPatrick Lam
dc.contributor.authorJiwei Song
dc.contributor.authorTrung Nguyen
dc.contributor.authorShannon Mendez Ruiz
dc.contributor.authorRaymond C B Wong
dc.contributor.authorAndrew K Wise
dc.contributor.authorRachael T Richardson
dc.date.accessioned2025-02-13T00:23:59Z
dc.date.available2025-02-13T00:23:59Z
dc.date.issued2024-12-20
dc.description.abstractIn the adult mammalian cochlea, hair cell loss is irreversible and causes deafness. The basic helix-loop transcription factor Atoh1 is essential for normal hair cell development in the embryonic ear. Over-expression of Atoh1 in the adult cochlea by gene therapy can convert supporting cells (cells that underlie hair cells) into a hair cell lineage. However, the regeneration outcomes can be inconsistent. Given that hair cell development is regulated by multiple signalling and transcriptional factors in a temporal and spatial manner, a more complex combinatorial approach targeting additional transcription factors may be required for efficient hair cell regeneration. There is evidence that epigenetic factors are responsible for the lack in regenerative capacity of the deaf adult cochlea. This study aimed to develop a combined gene therapy approach to reprogram both the genome and epigenome of supporting cells to improve the efficiency of hair cell regeneration. Adult Pou4f3-DTR mice were used in which the administration of diphtheria toxin was used to ablate hair cells whilst leaving supporting cells relatively intact. A single adeno-associated viral construct was used to express human Atoh1, Pou4f3 and short hairpin RNA against Kdm1a (regeneration gene therapy) at two weeks following partial or severe hair cell ablation. The average transduction of the inner supporting cells, as measured by the control AAV2.7m8-GFP vector in the deaf cochlea, was only 8 % while transduction in the outer sensory region was <1 %. At 4- and 6-weeks post-treatment the number of Myo+ hair cells in the control and regeneration gene therapy-treated mice were not significantly different. Of note, although both control and regeneration gene therapy treated cochleae contained supporting cells that co-expressed the hair cell marker Myo7a and the supporting cell marker Sox2, the regeneration gene therapy treated cochleae had significantly higher numbers of these cells (p < 0.05). Furthermore, among these treated cochleae, those that had more hair cell loss had a higher number of Myo7a positive supporting cells (R2=0.33, Pearson correlation analysis, p < 0.001). Overall, our results indicate that the adult cochlea possesses limited intrinsic spontaneous regenerative capacity, that can be further enhanced by genetic and epigenetic reprogramming.
dc.description.sponsorshipThis work was funded with support from Bionics Institute. The Bionics Institute and the Centre for Eye Research Australia acknowledges the support it receives from the Victorian Government, Australia, through its Operational Infrastructure Support Program. The authors would like to thank Flip Kammerer, David Nguyen, Alexander Hill, James Firth, Sayward Barone, Ella Trang and Peta Grigsby from the Bionics Institute, Melbourne, Australia, for technical assistance. The authors would also like to extend their thanks to Prof Edwin Rubel for providing the mouse deafness model.
dc.identifier.citationGunewardene N, Lam P, Song J, Nguyen T, Ruiz SM, Wong RCB, Wise AK, Richardson RT. Extent of genetic and epigenetic factor reprogramming via a single viral vector construct in deaf adult mice. Hear Res. 2024 Dec 20;457:109170. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2024.109170. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 39848037.
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.bionicsinstitute.org/handle/123456789/467
dc.publisherHearing Research
dc.titleExtent of genetic and epigenetic factor reprogramming via a single viral vector construct in deaf adult mice
dc.typeArticle

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