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![]() Researchers Restore Vision in an Animal Model of Childhood Blindness In a groundbreaking study published in the July 2000 issue of The Proceedings of the National Academy of Science USA, researchers rapidly restored lost vision in a mouse model of Leber congenital amaurosis (LCA) using oral doses of a chemical compound derived from vitamin A. LCA is a group of severe, early-onset, autosomal recessive, retinal degenerative diseases causing rapid vision loss at birth or during very early childhood. This finding represents the first time researchers have restored vision in an animal model of retinal degeneration. In this study, Dr. Krzysztof
Palczewski of the Department of Ophthalmology at the University of Washington
in Seattle, Dr. Samuel Jacobson of The Foundation's Research Center at the
Scheie Eye Institute of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and
their colleagues orally administered doses of a chemical called 9-cis-retinal
to 8- to 12-week-old mice with a form of LCA. Using electroretinograms (ERG),
a diagnostic tool that measures visual function, the researchers found that
treated mice experienced a profound restoration of vision. By comparison,
untreated mice of the same age have severely depressed ERG readings and
very little vision. Commenting on this study,
Dr. Gerald Chader, Chief Scientific Officer of The Foundation Fighting Blindness
said, "That Drs. Palczewski and Jacobson were able to restore lost vision
in an animal model with a severe retinal degenerative disease, offers hope
that we may be able to develop sight-restoring treatments for other forms
of retinal degeneration before retinal cells die. With advances in genetic
research, we are at last able to understand the causes of vision loss and
develop treatments that overcome a gene defect."LCA Can Be Caused By A Block In The Visual Cycle In 1997, Foundation researchers
discovered disease-causing mutations in a gene called RPE65 that account
for an estimated 10 percent of all LCA cases. The RPE65 gene product is
abundantly expressed in a layer of cells adjoining the neural retina called
the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). RPE cells support the function of
photoreceptor cells in the retina by providing essential nutrients and eliminating
digested waste products. As part of the visual cycle, RPE cells convert
vitamin A into a chemical that combines with a molecule found in rod photoreceptor
cells to form rhodopsin. Rhodopsin is the visual pigment in rod photoreceptor
cells that initiates phototransduction. In 1998, after cloning
the RPE65 gene, Foundation-supported researchers next developed a mouse
model of LCA that disrupts the function of the gene. This mouse model, known
as the RPE65 mouse, enabled researchers to study the specific cause of vision
loss in LCA at the cellular and molecular level. Through this animal model,
it was determined that the RPE65 gene product is critical to the visual
cycle and phototransduction. A mutation in the RPE65
gene disrupts the visual cycle, thus preventing the formation of rhodopsin
and phototransduction. Without rhodopsin, photoreceptor cells cannot function,
and vision loss ensues. Further investigation of the RPE65 mouse revealed
that, although vision loss occurs rapidly, photoreceptor cells do not immediately
degenerate and die. This finding led researchers to test treatments that
might compensate for the defective gene. By making the chemical 9-cis-retinal
directly available to RPE cells, the researchers successfully overcame the
dysfunctional RPE65 gene, allowing the mouse's retina to produce an artificial
rhodopsin that restored lost vision.Where Do We Go From Here? Another important issue
is how early and how late in the disease process one can successfully intervene.
Because there is some interval between the time retinal function is lost
and photoreceptor cells die, it needs to be predetermined whether older
patients are suitable candidates for such a treatment. Modern techniques
of clinical evaluation should allow for these questions to be addressed
in patients. Considerable work will thus need to be completed in the laboratory
and clinic before clinical trials can begin.Genetic Research Holds the Key |
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