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Dorsal root ganglion toxicity after AAV intra-CSF delivery of a RNAi expression construct into non-human primates and mice

Molecular Therapy, 2024

Hawley Z., Pardo I., Cao S., Zavodszky M., Casey F., Ferber K., Luo Y., Hana S., Chen S., Doherty J., Costa R., Cullen P., Liu Y., Carlile T., Chowdhury T., Doyle B., Clarner P., Mangaudis K., Guilmette E., Bourque S., Koske D., Nadella M., Trapa P., Hawes M., Raitcheva D., Lo S.

Disease areaApplication areaSample typeProducts
Other Diseases & Syndromes
Pathophysiology
Primate Csf
O

Olink Explore 3072/384

Abstract

Dorsal root ganglion (DRG) toxicity has been consistently reported as a potential safety concern after delivery of adeno-associated viruses (AAVs) containing gene replacement vectors but has yet to be reported for RNAi-based vectors. Here, we report DRG toxicity after AAV intra-CSF delivery of an RNAi expression construct—artificial miRNA targeting superoxide dismutase 1 (SOD1)—in nonhuman primates (NHPs) and provide evidence this can be recapitulated within mice. Histopathology evaluation showed that NHPs and mice develop DRG toxicity after AAV delivery, including DRG neuron degeneration and necrosis, and nerve fiber degeneration that were associated with increases in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum phosphorylated neurofilament heavy chain (pNF-H). RNA-seq analysis of DRGs showed that dysregulated pathways were preserved between NHPs and mice, including increases in innate/adaptive immune responses, and decreases in mitochondrial- and neuronal-related genes following AAV treatment. Finally, endogenous miR-21-5p was upregulated in DRGs of AAV-treated NHPs and mice. Increases in miR-21-5p were also identified within the CSF of NHPs, which significantly correlated with pNF-H, implicating miR-21-5p as a potential biomarker of DRG toxicity in conjunction with other molecular analytes. This work highlights the importance of assessing safety concerns related to DRG toxicity when developing RNAi-based AAV vectors for therapeutic purposes.

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