Friedreich's ataxia (FA) is a life-threatening autosomal recessive disorder characterized by neurological and cardiac dysfunction. Arrhythmias and heart failure are the main cause of premature death. From prior studies in murine models of FA, adeno-associated virus encoding the normal human frataxin gene (AAVrh.10hFXN) effectively treated the cardiac manifestations of the disease. However, the therapeutic dose window is limited by high level of human frataxin (hFXN) gene expression associated with toxicity. As a therapeutic goal, since FA heterozygotes have no clinical manifestations of FA, we estimated the level of frataxin (FXN) necessary to convert the heart of a homozygote to that of a heterozygote. In noncardiac cells, FA heterozygotes have 30-80% of normal FXN levels (17.7-47.2 ng/mg, average 32.5 ng/mg) and FA homozygotes 2-30% normal levels (1.2-17.7 ng/mg, average 9.4 ng/mg). Therefore, an AAV vector would need to augment endogenous in an FA homozygote by >8.3 ng/mg. To determine the required dose of AAVrh.10hFXN, we administered 1.8 × 10, 5.7 × 10, or 1.8 × 10 gc/kg of AAVrh.10hFXN intravenously (IV) to muscle creatine kinase (mck)-Cre conditional knockout mice, a cardiac and skeletal FXN knockout model. The minimally effective dose was 5.7 × 10 gc/kg, resulting in cardiac hFXN levels of 6.1 ± 4.2 ng/mg and a mild ( < 0.01 compared with phosphate-buffered saline controls) improvement in mortality. A dose of 1.8 × 10 gc/kg resulted in cardiac hFXN levels of 33.7 ± 6.4 ng/mg, a significant improvement in ejection fraction and fractional shortening ( < 0.05, both comparisons) and a 21.5% improvement in mortality ( < 0.001). To determine if the significantly effective dose of 1.8 × 10 gc/kg could achieve human FA heterozygote levels in a large animal, this dose was administered IV to nonhuman primates. After 12 weeks, the vector-expressed FXN in the heart was 17.8 ± 4.9 ng/mg, comparable to the target human levels. These data identify both minimally and significantly effective therapeutic doses that are clinically relevant for the treatment of the cardiac manifestations of FA.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10354731PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/hum.2023.020DOI Listing

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