A rare metabolic disorder called MPS I. It is caused by a deficiency of the key enzyme IDUA needed to break down complex sugars in cells.
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‘MPS I is part of a family of about 50 rare inherited disorders marked by defects in the lysosomes, compartments within cells filled with enzymes to digest large molecules.
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In the dogs that were exposed to the human IDUA protein early in life, the gene therapy could be tested without interference from an immune response. When the gene was delivered to the brain in these immune-tolerant dogs, the researchers observed widespread expression of the enzyme and resolution of the brain lesions that typically occur in MPS I patients. 
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"Our approach can test new human gene therapies in relevant animal models and may also have clinical applications for the prevention of immune responses to gene and protein replacement therapies," said first author Christian Hinderer, PhD, a senior research investigator working to complete his medical degree in the MD-PhD program at Penn. Hinderer, senior author James M. Wilson, MD, PhD, a professor of Medicine and Pediatrics and director of the Penn Orphan Disease Center, and Penn coauthor Mark Haskin, PhD, VMD, worked with Plott hounds, in which MPS I naturally occurs. These dogs were originally used to develop Aldurazyme, a substance used in enzyme replacement therapy that breaks down the protein fragments left in cells.
MPS I is part of a family of about 50 rare inherited disorders marked by defects in the lysosomes, compartments within cells filled with enzymes to digest large molecules. If one of these enzymes is mutated, molecules that would normally be degraded by the lysosome accumulate within the cell and their fragments are not recycled. Many of the individual MPS disorders share symptoms, such as vision and hearing problems, hernias, and heart problems. Patient groups estimate that in the United States 1 in 25,000 births will result in some form of MPS. Life expectancy varies significantly for people with MPS I, but individuals with the most severe form rarely live more than 10 years.
MPS I dogs have similar CNS, heart, and brain features as humans with MPS I. The dog model is better than mouse models for delivering the IDUA gene to the brain because the canine brain is closer in size to humans and better recapitulates human disease.
Animal models that closely mimic human disease are essential for preclinical evaluation of gene and protein therapeutics. However, these studies can be complicated by exaggerated immune responses against the human genes. In this paper, the team demonstrated that dogs with a genetic deficiency of IDUA were rendered immunologically tolerant to human IDUA through early exposure to the enzyme.
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These studies may help inform the planning and design of first-in-human trials.REGENXBIO Inc., which has exclusively licensed certain key AAV-related technologies from Penn,is involved in planning studies to test treatments for MPS I.
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Source-Newswise