Optogenetics may enable mutation-independent, circuit-specific restoration of neuronal function in neurological diseases. Retinitis pigmentosa is a neurodegenerative eye disease where loss of photoreceptors can lead to complete blindness. In a blind patient, we combined intraocular injection of an adeno-associated viral vector encoding ChrimsonR with light stimulation via engineered goggles. The goggles detect local changes in light intensity and project corresponding light pulses onto the retina in real time to activate optogenetically transduced retinal ganglion cells. The patient perceived, located, counted and touched different objects using the vector-treated eye alone while wearing the goggles. During visual perception, multichannel electroencephalographic recordings revealed object-related activity above the visual cortex. The patient could not visually detect any objects before injection with or without the goggles or after injection without the goggles. This is the first reported case of partial functional recovery in a neurodegenerative disease after optogenetic therapy.
About The Expert
José-Alain Sahel
Elise Boulanger-Scemama
Chloé Pagot
Angelo Arleo
Francesco Galluppi
Joseph N Martel
Simona Degli Esposti
Alexandre Delaux
Jean-Baptiste de Saint Aubert
Caroline de Montleau
Emmanuel Gutman
Isabelle Audo
Jens Duebel
Serge Picaud
Deniz Dalkara
Laure Blouin
Magali Taiel
Botond Roska
References
PubMed