Future of cell and gene therapies for Parkinson's disease
- 6 January 2009
- journal article
- future issues
- Published by Wiley in Annals of Neurology
- Vol. 64 (S2), S122-S138
- https://doi.org/10.1002/ana.21473
Abstract
The experimental field of restorative neurology continues to advance with implantation of cells or transfer of genes to treat patients with neurological disease. Both strategies have generated a consensus that demonstrates their capacity for structural and molecular brain modification in the adult brain. However, both approaches have yet to successfully address the complexities to make such novel therapeutic modalities work in the clinic. Prior experimental cell transplantation to patients with PD utilized dissected pieces of fetal midbrain tissue, containing mixtures of cells and neuronal types, as donor cells. Stem cell and progenitor cell biology provide new opportunities for selection and development of large batches of specific therapeutic cells. This may allow for cell composition analysis and dosing to optimize the benefit to an individual patient. The biotechnology used for cell and gene therapy for treatment of neurological disease may eventually be as advanced as today's pharmaceutical drug‐related design processes. Current gene therapy phase 1 safety trials for PD include the delivery of a growth factor (neurturin via the glial cell line–derived neurotrophic factor receptor) and a transmitter enzyme (glutamic acid decarboxylase and aromatic acid decarboxylase). Many new insights from cell biological and molecular studies provide opportunities to selectively express or suppress factors relevant to neuroprotection and improved function of neurons involved in PD. Future gene and cell therapies are likely to coexist with classic pharmacological therapies because their use can be tailored to individual patients' underlying disease process and need for neuroprotective or restorative interventions. Ann Neurol 2008;64 (suppl):S122–S138Keywords
This publication has 136 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dopamine neurons implanted into people with Parkinson's disease survive without pathology for 14 yearsNature Medicine, 2008
- Aging-related changes in the nigrostriatal dopamine system and the response to MPTP in nonhuman primates: Diminished compensatory mechanisms as a prelude to parkinsonismNeurobiology of Disease, 2007
- Identification of Intrinsic Determinants of Midbrain Dopamine NeuronsCell, 2006
- A Serious Adverse Event after Successful Gene Therapy for X-Linked Severe Combined ImmunodeficiencyNew England Journal of Medicine, 2003
- Neural induction, the default model and embryonic stem cellsNature Reviews Neuroscience, 2002
- Delayed delivery of AAV-GDNF prevents nigral neurodegeneration and promotes functional recovery in a rat model of Parkinson's diseaseGene Therapy, 2002
- Efficient generation of midbrain and hindbrain neurons from mouse embryonic stem cellsNature Biotechnology, 2000
- Transplanted xenogeneic neural cells in neurodegenerative disease models exhibit remarkable axonal target specificity and distinct growth patterns of glial and axonal fibresNature Medicine, 1995
- Effects of Glial Cell Line-Derived Neurotrophic Factor on Developing and Mature Ventral Mesencephalic Grafts in OculoExperimental Neurology, 1995
- Firing properties of substantia nigra dopaminergic neurons in freely moving ratsLife Sciences, 1985