Double administration of self-complementary AAV9NDUFS4 prevents Leigh disease in Ndufs4-/- mice

Brain. 2022 Oct 21;145(10):3405-3414. doi: 10.1093/brain/awac182.

Abstract

Leigh disease, or subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy, a genetically heterogeneous condition consistently characterized by defective mitochondrial bioenergetics, is the most common oxidative-phosphorylation related disease in infancy. Both neurological signs and pathological lesions of Leigh disease are mimicked by the ablation of the mouse mitochondrial respiratory chain subunit Ndufs4-/-, which is part of, and crucial for, normal Complex I activity and assembly, particularly in the brains of both children and mice. We previously conveyed the human NDUFS4 gene to the mouse brain using either single-stranded adeno-associated viral 9 recombinant vectors or the PHP.B adeno-associated viral vector. Both these approaches significantly prolonged the lifespan of the Ndufs4-/- mouse model but the extension of the survival was limited to a few weeks by the former approach, whereas the latter was applicable to a limited number of mouse strains, but not to primates. Here, we exploited the recent development of new, self-complementary adeno-associated viral 9 vectors, in which the transcription rate of the recombinant gene is markedly increased compared with the single-stranded adeno-associated viral 9 and can be applied to all mammals, including humans. Either single intra-vascular or double intra-vascular and intra-cerebro-ventricular injections were performed at post-natal Day 1. The first strategy ubiquitously conveyed the human NDUFS4 gene product in Ndufs4-/- mice, doubling the lifespan from 45 to ≈100 days after birth, when the mice developed rapidly progressive neurological failure. However, the double, contemporary intra-vascular and intra-cerebroventricular administration of self-complementary-adeno-associated viral NDUFS4 prolonged healthy lifespan up to 9 months of age. These mice were well and active at euthanization, at 6, 7, 8 and 9 months of age, to investigate the brain and other organs post-mortem. Robust expression of hNDUFS4 was detected in different cerebral areas preserving normal morphology and restoring Complex I activity and assembly. Our results warrant further investigation on the translatability of self-complementary-adeno-associated viral 9 NDUFS4-based therapy in the prodromal phase of the disease in mice and eventually humans.

Keywords: Ndufs4; Complex I; Leigh disease; gene therapy; mitochondrial disease.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Child
  • Dependovirus / genetics
  • Disease Models, Animal
  • Electron Transport Complex I / genetics
  • Electron Transport Complex I / metabolism
  • Humans
  • Leigh Disease* / genetics
  • Leigh Disease* / therapy
  • Mammals / metabolism
  • Mice
  • Mice, Knockout
  • Oxidative Phosphorylation

Substances

  • Electron Transport Complex I
  • NDUFS4 protein, human
  • Ndufs4 protein, mouse