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Article type: Review Article
Authors: Lennon, Matthew J.a; b; * | Rigney, Grantc | Raymont, Vanessac | Sachdev, Perminderb; d
Affiliations: [a] Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics, Sherrington Building, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK | [b] Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing (CHeBA), School of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW, Australia | [c] Department of Psychiatry, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK | [d] Neuropsychiatric Institute, Prince of Wales Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia
Correspondence: [*] Correspondence to: Matthew Lennon, MD, Graduate Student, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK. Tel.: +44 7884 065 323;E-mail: matthew.lennon@psy.ox.ac.uk; ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7097-3666
Abstract: Effective, disease modifying therapies for Alzheimer’s disease (AD) remain a quandary, following a panoply of expensive failures in human clinical trials. Given the stagnation in therapeutics, alternative approaches are needed. Recent successes of genetic therapies in other neurodegenerative diseases may highlight the way forward. This scoping review explores suggested targets of genetic therapy in AD, with a focus on vector-based approaches in pre-clinical and clinical trials. Putative targets of genetic therapies tested in pre-clinical trials include amyloid pathway intermediates and enzymes modulation, tau protein downregulation, APOE4 downregulation and APOE2 upregulation, neurotrophin expression (nerve growth factor (NGF) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor), and inflammatory cytokine alteration, among several other approaches. There have been three completed human clinical trials for genetic therapy in AD patients, all of which upregulated NGF in AD patients, showing some mixed evidence of benefit. Several impediments remain to be surpassed before genetic therapies can be successfully applied to AD, including the challenge of delivering monogenic genetic therapies for complex polygenic disorders, risks in the dominant delivery method (intracranial injection), stability of genetic therapies in vivo, poor translatability of pre-clinical AD models, and the expense of genetic therapy production. Genetic therapies represent an exciting opportunity within the world of AD therapeutics, but clinical applications likely remain a long term, rather than short term, possibility.
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease, amyloid, dementia, gene, genetic therapy, review, tau, therapy
DOI: 10.3233/JAD-215145
Journal: Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, vol. 84, no. 2, pp. 491-504, 2021
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