VARIANTS OF YEAST NDI1 GENE, AND USES THEREOF IN THE TREATMENT OF DISEASE ASSOCIATED WITH MITOCHONDRIAL DYSFUNCTION

Abstract
An isolated nucleic acid sequence encoding the yeast NDI1 protein of SEQ ID NO: 542 or a functional variant thereof is described. The nucleic acid sequence comprises at least 50 codons which are codon optimised compared with the sequence of yeast NDI1 gene of SEQ ID NO: 1.
Description
TECHNICAL FIELD

The invention relates to variants of yeast NDI1 gene, proteins encoded by the variants, and the uses of the variant genes, transcribed RNA and proteins in the treatment of disease, especially neurodegenerative disease.


INTRODUCTION

Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) is a maternally inherited disorder affecting 1/25,000 people, predominantly males1. Loss of central vision results from the degeneration of the retinal ganglion cell (RGC) layer and optic nerve2. In over 95% of patients the genetic pathogenesis of LHON involves mutations in genes encoding components of the mitochondrial respiratory NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase complex3 (complex I), which is involved in transfer of electrons from NADH to ubiquinone (coenzyme Q). Complex I is composed of forty-six subunits, seven of which are encoded by the mitochondrial genome, ND1-6 and ND4L. Mutations in five of the mitochondrially encoded subunits of complex I, ND1, ND4, ND4L, ND5 and ND6, are associated with LHON (http://www.mitomap.org/MITOMAP). There is growing evidence that mitochondrial dysfunction may be involved in a wide range of neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer disease (AD), Huntington disease and dominant optic atrophy as well as multifactorial diseases including dry and wet age related macular degeneration (AMD), diabetic retinopathies and glaucoma4. It is perhaps not surprising that a tissue such as retina, with the most significant energy requirements of any mammalian tissues, may be particularly vulnerable to mitochondrial dysfunction. However, it is notable that such a dependency on energy metabolism in principle may provide an opportunity for the development of therapeutic interventions for such high energy-dependent tissues where a shift in energy metabolism may potentially provide substantial beneficial effects. Complex I dysfunction results in an increase of reactive oxygen species (ROS) and a decreased energy supply6. In mitochondria, ATP synthesis is coupled to oxygen consumption by the proton electrochemical gradient established across the mitochondrial inner membrane in the process termed oxidative phosphorylation7 (OXPHOS). Mitochondrial complex I mutations leading to respiratory chain dysfunction are hence linked to reduced oxygen consumption; a reliable measure of overall mitochondrial activity.


Interestingly, many LHON mutations are not fully penetrant, it seems that the appearance of the pathological features of the disorder may be influenced by genetic and environmental modifiers. For example, it has been observed that the T14484C mutation in the ND6 subunit tends to be associated with a better clinical outcome and at times recovery in visual function8. Furthermore, there has been some suggestion that certain mitochondrial genetic backgrounds may render patients more or less susceptible to a variety of disorders including LHON and that this may be linked to variations in oxygen consumption, the efficiency of electron transport and ATP production9. For example, the G11778A and T14484C LHON mutations on a mitochondrial haplogroup J or K background have been associated with an increased risk of visual loss10. Nuclear modifier genes can influence LHON progression and severity, for example, an x-linked modifier locus has been reported11. Additionally, smoking has been suggested as one of the environmental factors which can influence disease penetrance12. In addition, the male prevalence (5:1) of LHON may at last in part be influenced by oestrogens13. An interplay between the primary mutation, modifying nuclear genes, the mtDNA genetic background and environmental factors may collaborate to determine overall risk of visual loss for a given LHON patient.


While significant progress has been made with regard to understanding the genetic pathogenesis of LHON, development of gene therapies for LHON has been impeded by the need to deliver therapies to the mitochondria of RGCs. In addition, intragenic heterogeneity has made development of therapies complex. Allotopic or nuclear expression of mitochondrial genes is being explored as a potential therapeutic avenue for some mitochondrial disorders including ND4-linked LHON, although modifications may be required to facilitate import of expressed proteins into mitochondria14,15,16. A nuclear complementation approach using NDI1 has been considered as a potential therapy for Parkinson disease (PD)17. Additionally, recombinant adenoassociated virus (AAV) serotype 5 delivery of NDI1 into the optic layer of the superior colliculus of the brain, has recently been shown to provide significant benefit in a chemically-induced rat model of LHON using functional and histological readouts18. Whereas this represents an exciting and innovative strategy making use of transkingdom gene therapy, the mode of delivery may not be readily translatable to human LHON patients.


It is an object of the invention to overcome at least one of the above-referenced problems.


STATEMENTS OF INVENTION

The invention relates to variants of the yeast NDI1 gene of SEQ ID NO: 1 which are codon optimised to provide for improved expression in mammalian cells, and/or modified to encode an immune optimised functional variant of NDI1 protein. Codon optimisation involves replacing codons which are common to yeast cells and uncommon to mammalian cells with synonomous codons which are common to mammalian cells. These are known as “silent changes” as they do not result in an amino acid change in the encoded protein. Codon optomisation provides for improved expression of the nucleic acid in mammalian cells and/or conveys less immunogenicity. Immune optimisation involves substitution of one or more amino acids (i.e. see Table 1b), for example from one to ten amino acids, in the protein to provide a variant protein that exhibits reduced immunogenicity in-vivo in humans compared to yeast NDI1 protein. Examples of possible amino acid changes include conservative amino acid changes at one or more of the following positions:


L195, K284, K10, S143, L502, L403, A387, S86, F90, L94, K196, L19, K214, K373, L259, K511, L159, R479, L483, I82, F90, L89, V266, K214, L481, L202, L259, L195, L150, R85, Y151, Y482, S488, V45, L483, S80, K196, for example one or more of the following amino acid changes:


L195F, K284E, K10R, S143N, L502M, L4031, A387S, S86K, F90H, L94M, K196E, L19M, K214E, K373E, L259F, K511E, L159M, R479Q, L483M, I82V, F90Y, L89I, V266I, K214E, L481I, L202M, L259V, L195I, L150M, R85K, Y151F, Y482F, S488T, V45I, L483M, S80T, K196T.


In a first aspect, the invention provides an isolated nucleic acid sequence encoding the yeast NDI1 protein of SEQ ID NO: 542 or a functional variant thereof having at least 90% sequence identity with SEQ ID NO: 542, wherein the nucleic acid comprises at least 50 codons which are codon optimised compared with the sequence of yeast NDI1 gene of SEQ ID NO: 1.


Examples of codon optimised variants of yeast NDI1 gene are provided in SEQ ID NO'S: 2-62, 75-145, 165-243, 264-341, 362-441, 462-541, and 705-1004.


In a second aspect, the invention provides an isolated codon optimised nucleic acid sequence encoding an immune optimised functional variant of the yeast NDI1 protein of SEQ ID NO: 542 comprising at least one conservative amino acid change at a residue selected from the group consisting of:


L195, K284, K10, S143, L502, L403, A387, S86, F90, L94, K196, L19, K214, K373, L259, K511, L159, R479, L483, I82, F90, L89, V266, K214, L481, L202, L259, L195, L150, R85, Y151, Y482, S488, V45, L483, S80, K196, for example one or more of the following amino acid changes:


L195F, K284E, K10R, S143N, L502M, L4031, A387S, S86K, F90H, L94M, K196E, L19M, K214E, K373E, L259F, K511E, L159M, R479Q, L483M, I82V, F90Y, L89I, V266I, K214E, L481I, L202M, L259V, L195I, L150M, R85K, Y151F, Y482F, S488T, V45I, L483M, S80T, K196T, wherein the nucleic acid comprises at least 50 codons which are codon optimised compared with the sequence of wild-type yeast NDI1 gene of SEQ ID NO: 1.


Examples of immune and codon optimised variants of yeast NDI1 gene are provided in SEQ ID NO'S: 75-145, 165-243, 264-341, 362-441, 462-541, 566-584, 705-824, 835-884, 895-944 and 955-1004.


In a third aspect, the invention provides an isolated nucleic acid sequence encoding an immune optimised functional variant of yeast NDI1 protein of SEQ ID NO: 542 in which the variant comprises at least one conservative amino acid change at a residue selected from the group consisting of:


L195, K284, K10, S143, L502, L403, A387, S86, F90, L94, K196, L19, K214, K373, L259, K511, L159, R479, L483, 182, F90, L89, V266, K214, L481, L202, L259, L195, L150, R85, Y151, Y482, S488, V45, L483, S80, K196, for example one or more of the following amino acid changes:


L195F, K284E, K10R, S143N, L502M, L4031, A387S, S86K, F90H, L94M, K196E, L19M, K214E, K373E, L259F, K511E, L159M, R479Q, L483M, I82V, F90Y, L89I, V266I, K214E, L481I, L202M, L259V, L195I, L150M, R85K, Y151F, Y482F, S488T, V45I, L483M, S80T, K196T,


In an additional aspect of the invention the NDI1 gene and encoded protein are immune optimized employing amino acid substitution(s) at one or more key NDI1 positions as defined by K10, L19, V45, S80, I82, R85, S86, L89, F90, L94, S143, L150, Y151, L159, L195, K196, L202, K214, L259, V266, K284, K373, A387, L403, R479, L481, Y482, L483, S488, L502, K511.


Examples of immune optimised variants of yeast NDI1 gene (without codon optimisation) are provided in SEQ ID NO'S: 63-74 and 547-565 (one amino acid change), 146-164 and 585-605 (two amino acid changes), 244-263 and 606-640 (three amino acid changes), 641-675 (four amino acid changes), 342-361 and 676-696 (five amino acid changes), 697-703 (six amino acid changes), 704 (seven amino acid changes) and 442-461 (ten amino acid changes).


Typically, the nucleic acid sequence of the invention encodes a functional variant of the yeast NDI1 protein of SEQ ID NO: 542 having at last 90% sequence identity with SEQ ID NO:542. Preferably, the functional variant comprises at least 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98% or 99% sequence identity with SEQ ID NO: 542.


Preferably, the nucleic acid sequence of the invention encodes a yeast NDI1 protein that includes at least 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, or 10 amino acid changes. Typically, from 1-20, 1-15, or ideally from 1-10, amino acids are changed. The changes are suitably conservative changes made to one or more of the residues identified above, for example one or more of: L195F, K284E, K10R, S143N, L502M, L4031, A387S, S86K, F90H, L94M, K196E, L19M, K214E, K373E, L259F, K511E, L159M, R479Q, L483M, I82V, F90Y, L89I, V266I, K214E, L481I, L202M, L259V, L195I, L150M, R85K, Y151F, Y482F, S488T, V45I, L483M, S80T, K196T.


Preferably, the nucleic acid sequence of the invention encodes a yeast NDI1 protein that includes at least 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, or 10 amino acid changes. Typically, from 1-20, 1-15, or ideally from 1-10, amino acids are changed, and the changes are suitably selected at NDI1 positions from the group: K10, L19, V45, S80, I82, R85, S86, L89, F90, L94, S143, L150, Y151, L159, L195, K196, L202, K214, L259, V266, K284, K373, A387, L403, R479, L481, Y482, L483, S488, L502, K511.


Suitably, the variant protein includes at least 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, or all of the amino acid changes selected from: L195F, K284E, K10R, S143N, L502M, L4031, A387S, S86K, F90H, L94M, K196E, L19M, K214E, K373E, L259F, K511E, L159M, R479Q, L483M, I82V, F90Y, L89I, V266I, K214E, L481I, L202M, L259V, L195I, L150M, R85K, Y151F, Y482F, S488T, V45I, L483M, S80T, K196T.


Ideally, the variant protein includes an amino acid change selected from: L195F, K284E, K10R, S143N, L502M, L4031, A387S, S86K, F90H, L94M, K196E, L19M, K214E, K373E, L259F, K511E, L159M, R479Q, L483M, I82V, F90Y, L89I, V266I, K214E, L481I, L202M, L259V, L195I, L150M, R85K, Y151F, Y482F, S488T, V45I, L483M, S80T, K196T.


Preferably, at least 90, 100, 150, 200, 250, 300, 320, or 329 codons are codon optimised for use in a mammal. In one embodiment, 1-100, 100-200, 200-300, or 300-329 codons are optimised. Ideally, 329 codons are optimised (see SEQ ID NO's 62, 134-145, 225-243, 324-341, 422-441, 522-541, 566-584 and 705-824).


In another embodiment 1-100, 100-200, 200-300, or 300-329 NDI1 codons are optimised for use in mammals and the nucleic acid sequence encodes a yeast NDI1 protein that includes at least 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, or 10 amino acid changes. Typically, from 1-20, 1-15, or ideally from 1-10, amino acids are changed, and the changes are suitably selected at NDI1 positions from the group: K10, L19, V45, S80, I82, R85, S86, L89, F90, L94, S143, L150, Y151, L159, L195, K196, L202, K214, L259, V266, K284, K373, A387, L403, R479, L481, Y482, L483, S488, L502, K511.


Preferably, the nucleic acid of the invention encodes a variant protein having at least 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98% or 99% sequence identity with SEQ ID NO: 542.


The invention also relates to a nucleic acid construct comprising a nucleic acid sequence of the invention and a nucleic acid sequence encoding a mitochondrial localisation sequence. This may be, but are not limited to, sequences such as MLSKNLYSNKRLLTSTNTLVRFASTRS (SEQ ID NO: 1006) or MSVLTPLLLRGLTGSARRLPVPRAKIHSL (SEQ ID NO: 1007).


The invention also relates to a nucleic acid construct encoding a protein of the invention. The nucleic acid may be a DNA or RNA nucleic acid. The nucleic acid of the invention may use modified nucleic acids to optimise delivery and or increase stability and or increase longevity and or reduce immunogenicity 22,23.


In one aspect the invention relates to delivery of RNA encoding the protein and or protein variants of the invention.


The invention also relates to a protein encoded by a nucleic acid construct of the invention.


The term “nucleic acid sequence of the invention” as employed hereafter should be understood to mean either or both of the nucleic acid sequences of the invention and the nucleic acid constructs of the invention.


The invention also relates to a nucleic acid sequence selected from SEQ ID NO's: 1-541 and 547-1004.


The invention also relates to a protein encoded by a nucleic acid sequence of the invention. The protein may also include one or more mitochondrial localisation signal(s). This may be but not limited to sequences such as MLSKNLYSNKRLLTSTNTLVRFASTRS (SEQ ID NO: 1006) or MSVLTPLLLRGLTGSARRLPVPRAKIHSL (SEQ ID NO: 1007).


The invention also relates to a vector suitable for use in gene therapy and comprising a nucleic acid sequence of the invention. Suitably the vector is a viral vector, typically an adeno-associated virus (AAV), preferably AAV virus serotype 2, although other AAV serotypes and other types of vectors may be employed such as for example other viral vectors, non-viral vectors, naked DNA and other vectors, examples of which are listed in Table 5. Typically, the nucleic acid of the invention is expressed singly from the vector (single delivery vehicle). In another embodiment, the nucleic acid of the invention is expressed together with another gene either from the single delivery vehicle or using two delivery vechicles, for example, a gene that enhances cell survival and or cell function such as a neurotrophic factor, a growth factor, an anti-apoptotic agent, an antioxidant, a cytokine, a hormone or others, examples of which are described in Table 6. Genes may be delivered at the same time and/or before and/or after each other. Ideally, the second gene is a neurotrophic factor, examples of which are described in Table 6.


The invention also relates to a kit comprising a vector of the invention in combination with a second vector comprising a gene that enhances cell survival and or cell function such as a neurotrophic factor, a growth factor, an anti-apoptotic agent, an antioxidant, a cytokine, a hormone or others, examples of which are described in Table 6. Ideally, the second vector comprises a gene encoding a neurotrophic factor.


In an additional aspect additional gene sequences may be expressed in the same vector as the nucleic acid of the invention from a component such as an internal ribosome entry site (IRES) and or may be expressed using two or multiple promoter sequences.


Typically, the vector of the invention comprises a promotor wherein the nucleic acid of the invention is expressed from the promotor. Preferably, the promotor is one that is preferentially or specifically expressed in retinal ganglion cells (RGC's) wherein expression of the nucleic acid of the invention is under the control of the promotor. Examples of such promotors are described in Table 4. In an alternative embodiment, the vector of the invention comprises a promotor known to be expressed at low levels in RGC's.


In a further embodiment, the promotor is one that is known to be expressed in multiple cell types, examples of which are described in Table 4.


In an additional aspect, the nucleic acid of the invention is expressed from an inducible and/or conditional promotor.


In a further embodiment, the promotor is a tissue specific and/or cell specific promotor targeting mammalian cells other than RGC's such as the rhodopsin promotor which expresses in rod photoreceptor cells. Suitably, the vector comprises tissue specific and/or cell specific promotors combined with an inducible promotor system to control expression of the nucleic acid.


The promotors may control expression of the nucleic acid of the invention in combination with additional genes, as described above. Alternatively, the vector may comprise different promotors for expressing the nucleic acid of the invention and the other genes, for example, a gene encoding a neurotrophic agent.


The invention also relates to a method for the treatment and/or prevention of a neurodegenerative disease, especially LHON, which method comprises a step of delivering a nucleic acid of the invention to an individual by means of intraocular, ideally intravitreal, delivery. In one aspect a nucleic acid of the invention is delivered to an individual by means of systemic administration.


Preferably, the step of delivering the nucleic acid of the invention involves delivering a vector of the invention to the individual.


The invention also relates to the use of a nucleic acid of the invention, or a protein encoded by a nucleic acid of the invention, or a vector of the invention, as a medicament.


The invention also relates to a nucleic acid sequence of the invention, or a protein encoded by a nucleic acid sequence of the invention, or a vector of the invention, for use in the treatment of a disease or condition associated with mitochondrial dysfunction, for example a neurodegenerative disease, especially Leber Hereditory Optic Neuropathy (LHON). Typically, the treatment is symptomatic or prophylactic treatment.


The invention also relates to a method of treating a disease, for example a disease associated with mitochondrial dysfunction, for example a neurodegenerative disease, in an individual comprising a step of administering an active agent to the individual, typically administering the active agent to the eye, ideally to the retinal ganglion cells, photoreceptor cells or other eye cells, in which the active agent includes a nucleic acid sequence of the invention, a protein encoded by the nucleic acid sequence of the invention, or a vector of the invention. The treatment may be symptomatic or prophylactic treatment.


Typically, the active agent is administered by intra-ocular, ideally intra-vitreal and/or subretinal, administration. The active agent may include an additional agent, for example a gene or protein or compounds that enhances cell survival and or cell function such as a neurotrophic factor, a growth factor, an anti-apoptotic agent, an antioxidant, a cytokine, a hormone or others, examples of which are described in Table 6. The active agent and the additional agent, for example an additional gene, may be delivered at the same time or before or after each other.


Ideally, the additional agent is a gene encoding a neurotrophic factor, examples of which are described in Table 6. The active agent may be delivered by means of a vector, or by means of separate vectors, or by direct delivery of the additional agent. The active agent may be delivered to other parts of the body involving mitochondrial dysfunction, for example, to the brain for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease or dementia, or to photoreceptor cells for the treatment of Retinitis Pigmentosa or Age-related macular degeneration, or to muscle cells to treat muscle weakness and/or degeneration.


Further, the nucleic acid sequence of the invention, its protein product, or a vector of the invention, may be delivered to the target cell or tissue at the same time or at a different time to the additional agent.


The invention also relates to a cell, for example a stem cell or progenitor cell, RGC or RGC precursor cell that is transformed with a nucleic acid of the invention. Cells of the invention may be delivered to the eye via subretinal and/or intravitreal injection to treat cells of the eye affected by mitochondrial dysfunction such as RGC dysfunction. Alternatively, cells of the invention may be delivered to other parts of the body involving mitochondrial dysfunction, for example to the brain for the treatment of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer disease, Parkinsons disease or dementia, or to photoreceptor cells for the treatment of Retinitis Pigmentosa or Age-related macular degeneration, or to muscle cells to treat muscle weakness and/or degeneration.


Thus, the invention also relates to a transformed cell of the invention for use as a medicament. The invention also relates to a method of treating a disease or condition involving mitochondrial dysfunction, typically a neurodegenerative disease, suitably LHON, comprising a step of delivering cells of the invention to the individual.


The invention also provides a pharmaceutical formulation comprising an active agent selected from a nucleic acid of the invention, a protein encoded by the nucleic acid of the invention, a vector of the invention, or a cell of the invention, in combination with a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.


Suitably, the formulation is provided in the form of a slow release capsule adapted to release the active agent following subretinal and or intravitreal injection, or following delivery to or close to a target tissue type/cell type (see examples in Table 7).


In an additional embodiment encapsulated cell technology is employed for delivery of the therapy.


In one embodiment the invention provides a transgenic organ, or a transgenic non-human animal, comprising the nucleic acids and vectors of the invention.


In another embodiment the invention may be delivered to cells with mutations in the nuclear genome which lead to disease phenotypes which are similar to disease phenotypes related to mitochondrial mutations. For example the disease phenotypes described in Table 8 may all result from nuclear mutations or mitochondrial mutations and hence may benefit from the invention. The invention would need to be delivered to the appropriate affected cell or tissue type. Typically these nuclear mutations affect cell types that require high levels of energy such as neurons and muscle cells. Hence these disorders, resulting from mutations in the nuclear genome and affecting these high energy requiring cell types may also benefit from additional energy provided by the invention.


In a further aspect, the invention relates to a method for the treatment or prevention of a neurodegenerative disease, especially LHON, which method comprises a step of delivering a yeast NDI1 gene, or a variant thereof such as a nucleic acid of the invention, to an individual by means of intraocular delivery, ideally intravitreal and/or subretinal delivery.


In a yet further aspect, the invention relates to a method for the treatment or prevention of a neurodegenerative disease, especially LHON, which method comprises a step of delivering a yeast NDI1 gene, or a variant thereof such as a nucleic acid of the invention, and an agent that enhances cell survival and or cell function such as a neurotrophic factor, a growth factor, an anti-apoptotic agent, an antioxidant, a cytokine, a hormone or others (examples of which are described in Table 6) to an individual. Treatment may be symptomatic or prophylactic.


In a yet further aspect, the invention relates to a method for the treatment or prevention of a neurodegenerative disease, especially LHON, which method comprises a step of delivering a yeast NDI1 gene, or a variant thereof such as a nucleic acid of the invention using an AAV vector, and delivery of an agent, using the same or a separate AAV vector, that enhances cell survival and or cell function such as a neurotrophic factor, a growth factor, an anti-apoptotic agent, an antioxidant, a cytokine, a hormone or others (examples of which are described in Table 6) to an individual. Treatment may be symptomatic or prophylactic.


The term “yeast NDI1 gene” refers to the wild-type Saccharomyces cerviscae NDI1 gene shown in SEQ ID NO: 1.


The term “variant of yeast NDI1 gene” means a variant of yeast NDI1 gene which differs from the wild-type gene due to at least codon optimisation, immune optimisation, or both.


The term “conservative amino acid change” should to be understood to mean that the amino acid being introduced is similar structurally, chemically, or functionally to that being substituted. In particular, it refers to the substitution of an amino acid of a particular grouping as defined by its side chain with a different amino acid from the same grouping.


The term nucleic acid means deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA), ribonucleic acid (RNA), and artificial nucleic acid analogs such as peptide nucleic acid (PNA), morpholino- and locked nucleic acid, glycol nucleic acid and threose nucleic acid. Artificial nucleic acid analogs differ from DNA and RNA as they typically contain changes to the backbone of the molecule. Nucleic acids incorporating chemical modification(s) to DNA and RNA to optimise delivery and or increase stability and or increase longevity and or reduce immunogenicity are also contemplated by the term nucleic acid. Modifications, such as phosphorothioates, boranophosphate, 2′-Amino, 2′-Fluoro, 2′-Methoxy have been made to nucleic acids to modulate parameters such as resistance to nuclease degradation, binding affinity and or uptake. Exemplary nucleic acid molecules for use are phosphoramidate, phosphothioate and methylphosphonate analogs of DNA and or RNA. Modifications include but are not limited to inclusion of 5-fluorouracil, 5-bromouracil, 5-chlorouracil, 5-iodouracil, hypoxanthine, xantine, 4-acetylcytosine, 5-(carboxyhydroxylmethyl)uracil, 5-carboxymethylaminomethyl-2-thiouridine, 5-carboxymethylaminomethyluracil, dihydrouracil, beta-D-galactosylqueosine, inosine, N6-isopentenyladenine, 1-methylguanine, 1-methylinosine, 2,2-dimethylguanine, 2-methyladenine, 2-methylguanine, 3-methylcytosine, 5-methylcytosine, N6-adenine, 7-methylguanine, 5-methylaminomethyluracil, 5-methoxyaminomethyl-2-thiouracil, beta-D-mannosylqueosine, 5′-methoxycarboxymethyluracil, 5-methoxyuracil, 2-methylthio-N6-isopentenyladenine, uracil-5-oxyacetic acid (v), wybutoxosine, pseudouracil, queosine, 2-thiocytosine, 2′-O-methyl, 5-methyl-2-thiouracil, 2-thiouracil, 4-thiouracil, 5-methyluracil, uracil-5-oxyacetic acid methylester, uracil-5-oxyacetic acid (v), -5-methyl-2-thiouracil, 3-(3-amino-3-N-2-carboxypropyl)uracil, (acp3)w, and 2,6-diaminopurine, 2-thiourdine, 5-methyl-cytidine amongst others.


The term “codon optimised” means that a codon that expresses a bias for yeast (i.e. is common in yeast genes but uncommon in mammalian genes) is changed to a synonomous codon (a codon that codes for the same amino acid) that expresses a bias for mammals. Thus, the change in codon does not result in any amino acid change in the encoded protein.


The term “immune optimised” as applied to a variant of yeast NDI1 gene means that the gene variant encodes a variant NDI1 protein which elicits a reduced immune response when expressed in a mammal compared to the wild-type yeast NDI1 gene.


The term “yeast NDI1 protein” should be understood to mean the wild-type Saccharomyces cerviscae NDI1 protein shown in SEQ ID NO: 542. The “functional variant” should be understood to mean a variant of SEQ ID NO: 542 which retains the functionality of yeast NDI1 protein, for example, comparable oxygen consumption measurements in the presence of rotenone (see methods below/FIG. 2). Typically, the functional variants of yeast NDI1 protein will have at least 90%, 91%, 92%, 93%, 94%, 95%, 96%, 97%, 98% or 99% sequence identity with SEQ ID NO: 542. In this context, a polypeptide sequence that shares 90% amino acid identity with SEQ ID NO: 542 is one in which any 90% of aligned residues are either identical to, or conservative substitutions of, the corresponding residues in SEQ ID NO: 542. The “percent sequence identity” of two amino acid sequences is determined using the algorithm of Karlin and Altschul Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 87:2264-68, 1990, modified as in Karlin and Altschul Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 90:5873-77, 1993. Such an algorithm is incorporated into the NBLAST and XBLAST programs (version 2.0) of Altschul, et al. J. Mol. Biol. 215:403-10, 1990. BLAST protein searches can be performed with the XBLAST program, score=50, wordlength=3 to obtain amino acid sequences homologous to the protein molecules of the invention. Where gaps exist between two sequences, Gapped BLAST can be utilized as described in Altschul et al., Nucleic Acids Res. 25(17):3389-3402, 1997. When utilizing BLAST and Gapped BLAST programs, the default parameters of the respective programs (e.g., XBLAST and NBLAST) can be used.


The term “neurodegenerative disease” should be understood to mean a disease characterised by neuronal injury or death, or axonal degeneration, and includes diseases such as motor neuron disease; prion disease; Huntington's disease; Parkinson's disease; Parkinson's plus; Tauopathies; Chromosome 17 dementias; Alzheimer's disease; Multiple sclerosis (MS); hereditary and acquired neuropathies; retinopathies and diseases involving cerebellar degeneration.


In the context of the present invention, the term “gene therapy” refers to treatment of individual which involves insertion of a gene into an individual's cells for the purpose of preventing or treating disease. Insertion of the gene is generally achieved using a delivery vehicle, also known as a vector. Viral and non-viral vectors may be employed to deliver a gene to a patients' cells. Other types of vectors suitable for use in gene therapy are described below.


The term “neurotrophic agent” should be understood to mean a protein that induces the survival, development and function of neurons. Examples include nerve growth factor (NGF) and brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF). Other examples are provided below.


Retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) are types of neurons located close to the inner surface (the retinal ganglion layer) of the retina of the eye. They collectively image forming and non-image forming visual information from the retina to several regions in the thalamus, hypothalamus, and mid-brain.


It will be appreciated that the nucleci acids of the invention may include one or more polyadenylation signals, typically located at the 3′-end of the molecule. In addition, the nucleic acid may include a leader sequence and/or a stop codon. It will also be appreciated that the nucleci acids of the invention may include one or more signals to facilitate import of proteins into mitochondria.


Proteins and polypeptides (including variants and fragments thereof) of and for use in the invention may be generated wholly or partly by chemical synthesis or by expression from nucleic acid. The proteins and peptides of and for use in the present invention can be readily prepared according to well-established, standard liquid or, preferably, solid-phase peptide synthesis methods known in the art (see, for example, J. M. Stewart and J. D. Young, Solid Phase Peptide Synthesis, 2nd edition, Pierce Chemical Company, Rockford, Ill. (1984), in M. Bodanzsky and A. Bodanzsky, The Practice of Peptide Synthesis, Springer Verlag, New York (1984).


Apart from the specific delivery systems embodied below, various delivery systems are known and can be used to administer the therapeutic of the invention, e.g., encapsulation in liposomes, microparticles, microcapsules, recombinant cells capable of expressing the Therapeutic, receptor-mediated endocytosis (see, e.g., Wu and Wu, 1987, J. Biol. Chem. 262:4429-4432), construction of a therapeutic nucleic acid as part of a retroviral or other vector, etc. Methods of introduction include but are not limited to intradermal, intramuscular, intraperitoneal, intraocular, intravenous, subcutaneous, intranasal, epidural, and oral routes. The compounds may be administered by any convenient route, for example by infusion or bolus injection, by absorption through epithelial or mucocutaneous linings (e.g., oral mucosa, rectal and intestinal mucosa, etc.) and may be administered together with other biologically active agents. Administration can be systemic or local. In addition, it may be desirable to introduce the pharmaceutical compositions of the invention into the central nervous system by any suitable route, including intraventricular and intrathecal injection; intraventricular injection may be facilitated by an intraventricular catheter, for example, attached to a reservoir, such as an Ommaya reservoir. Pulmonary administration can also be employed, e.g., by use of an inhaler or nebulizer, and formulation with an aerosolizing agent. In addition, naked DNA can be used for delivery.


In one aspect of the invention, agents such as surfactants may be included in formulations to minimize aggregation of the therapeutic of the invention, whether viral and/or non-viral vectors, proteins or polypeptides and/or cells.


In a specific embodiment, it may be desirable to administer the pharmaceutical compositions of the invention locally to the area in need of treatment; this may be achieved, for example, by means of an implant, said implant being of a porous, non-porous, or gelatinous material, including membranes, such as sialastic membranes, or fibers.


In another embodiment, the therapeutic can be delivered in a vesicle, in particular a liposome (see Langer, Science 249:1527-1533 (1990); Treat et al., in Liposomes in the Therapy of Infectious Disease and Cancer, Lopez-Berestein and Fidler (eds.), Liss, New York, pp. 353-365 (1989); Lopez-Berestein, ibid., pp. 317-327; see generally ibid.)


In yet another embodiment, the therapeutic can be delivered in a controlled release system. In one embodiment, a pump may be used (see Langer, supra; Sefton, CRC Crit. Ref. Biomed., Eng. 14:201 (1987); Buchwald et al., Surgery 88:75 (1980); Saudek et al., N. Engl. J. Med. 321:574 (1989)). In another embodiment, polymeric materials can be used (see Medical Applications of Controlled Release, Langer and Wise (eds.), CRC Pres., Boca Raton, Fla. (1974); Controlled Drug Bioavailability, Drug Product Design and Performance, Smolen and Ball (eds.), Wiley, New York (1984); Ranger and Peppas, J. Macromol. Sci. Rev. Macromol. Chem. 23:61 (1983); see also Levy et al., Science 228:190 (1985); During et al., Ann. Neurol. 25:351 (1989); Howard et al., J. Neurosurg. 71:105 (1989)). In yet another embodiment, a controlled release system can be placed in proximity of the therapeutic target, thus requiring only a fraction of the systemic dose (see, e.g., Goodson, in Medical Applications of Controlled Release, supra, vol. 2, pp. 115-138 (1984)). Other controlled release systems are discussed in the review by Langer (Science 249:1527-1533 (1990)).


The present invention also provides pharmaceutical compositions comprising a nucleic acid of the invention and/or a protein encoded by the nucleic acid. Such compositions comprise a therapeutically effective amount of the therapeutic, and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier. In a specific embodiment, the term “pharmaceutically acceptable” means approved by a regulatory agency of the Federal or a state government or listed in the U.S. Pharmacopeia or other generally recognized pharmacopeia for use in animals, and humans. The term “carrier” refers to a diluent, adjuvant, excipient, or vehicle with which the therapeutic is administered. Such pharmaceutical carriers can be sterile liquids, such as water and oils, including those of petroleum, animal, vegetable or synthetic origin, such as peanut oil, soybean oil, mineral oil, sesame oil and the like. Water is a preferred carrier when the pharmaceutical composition is administered intravenously. Saline solutions and aqueous dextrose and glycerol solutions can also be employed as liquid carriers, particularly for injectable solutions. Suitable pharmaceutical excipients include starch, glucose, lactose, sucrose, gelatin, malt, rice, flour, chalk, silica gel, sodium stearate, glycerol monostearate, talc, sodium chloride, dried skim milk, glycerol, propylene glycol, water, ethanol and the like.


The composition, if desired, can also contain minor amounts of wetting or emulsifying agents, or pH buffering agents. These compositions can take the form of solutions, suspensions, emulsion, tablets, pills, capsules, powders, sustained-release formulations and the like. The composition can be formulated as a suppository, with traditional binders and carriers such as triglycerides. Oral formulation can include standard carriers such as pharmaceutical grades of mannitol, lactose, starch, magnesium stearate, sodium saccharine, cellulose, magnesium carbonate, etc. Examples of suitable pharmaceutical carriers are described in “Remington's Pharmaceutical Sciences” by E. W. Martin. Such compositions will contain a therapeutically effective amount of the therapeutic, preferably in purified form, together with a suitable amount of carrier so as to provide the form for proper administration to the patient.


In a preferred embodiment, the composition is formulated in accordance with routine procedures as a pharmaceutical composition adapted for intravenous administration to human beings. Typically, compositions for intravenous administration are solutions in sterile isotonic aqueous buffer. Where necessary, the composition may also include a solubilizing agent and a local anesthetic such as lignocaine to, ease pain at the, site of the injection. Generally, the ingredients are supplied either separately or mixed together in unit dosage form, for example, as a dry lyophilized powder or water free concentrate in a hermetically sealed container such as an ampoule or sachette indicating the quantity of active agent. Where the composition is to be administered by infusion, it can be dispensed with an infusion bottle containing sterile pharmaceutical grade water or saline. Where the composition is administered by injection, an ampoule of sterile water for injection or saline can be provided so that the ingredients may be mixed prior to administration.


The amount of the therapeutic of the invention which will be effective in the treatment of a particular disorder or condition will depend on the nature of the disorder or condition, and can be determined by standard clinical techniques. In addition, in vivo and/or in vitro assays may optionally be employed to help predict optimal dosage ranges. The precise dose to be employed in the formulation will also depend on the route of administration, and the seriousness of the disease or disorder, and should be decided according to the judgment of the practitioner and each patient's circumstances.


Nucleic Acid Sequences of the Invention

The sequence listing below provides a number of nucleic acid sequences according to the invention, specifically:


SEQ ID NO: 1—Yeast NDI1 gene—0 amino acid changes—0 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 2-21 and 825-834—Yeast NDI1 gene—0 amino acid changes—100 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 22-41 and 885-894—Yeast NDI1 gene—0 amino acid changes—200 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 42-61 and 945-954—Yeast NDI1 gene—0 amino acid changes—300 codon changes


SEQ ID NO 62—Yeast NDI1 gene—0 amino acid changes—329 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 63-74 and 547-565—Yeast NDI1 gene—1 amino acid changes—0 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 75-94 and 835-844—Yeast NDI1 gene—1 amino acid changes—100 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 95-114 and 895-904—Yeast NDI1 gene—1 amino acid changes—200 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 115-134 and 955-964—Yeast NDI1 gene—1 amino acid changes—300 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 134-145 and 566-584—Yeast NDI1 gene—1 amino acid changes—329 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 146-164 and 585-605—Yeast NDI1 gene—2 amino acid changes—0 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 165-184 and 845-854—Yeast NDI1 gene—2 amino acid changes—100 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 185-204 and 905-914—Yeast NDI1 gene—2 amino acid changes—200 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 205-224 and 965-974—Yeast NDI1 gene—2 amino acid changes—300 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 225-243 and 705-725—Yeast NDI1 gene—2 amino acid changes—329 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 244-263 and 606-640—Yeast NDI1 gene—3 amino acid changes—0 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 264-283 and 855-864—Yeast NDI1 gene—3 amino acid changes—100 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 284-303 and 915-924—Yeast NDI1 gene—3 amino acid changes—200 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 304-323 and 975-984—Yeast NDI1 gene—3 amino acid changes—300 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 324-341 and 726-760—Yeast NDI1 gene—3 amino acid changes—329 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 641-675—Yeast NDI1 gene—4 amino acid changes—0 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 865-874—Yeast NDI1 gene—4 amino acid changes—100 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 925-934—Yeast NDI1 gene—4 amino acid changes—200 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 985-994—Yeast NDI1 gene—4 amino acid changes—300 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 761-795—Yeast NDI1 gene—4 amino acid changes—329 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 342-361 and 676-696—Yeast NDI1 gene—5 amino acid changes—0 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 362-381 and 875-884—Yeast NDI1 gene—5 amino acid changes—100 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 382-401 and 935-944—Yeast NDI1 gene—5 amino acid changes—200 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 402-421 and 995-1004—Yeast NDI1 gene—5 amino acid changes—300 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 422-441 and 796-816—Yeast NDI1 gene—5 amino acid changes—329 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 697-703—Yeast NDI1 gene—6 amino acid changes—0 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 817-823—Yeast NDI1 gene—6 amino acid changes—329 codon changes


SEQ ID NO 704—Yeast NDI1 gene—7 amino acid changes—0 codon changes SEQ ID NO 824—Yeast NDI1 gene—7 amino acid changes—329 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 442-461—Yeast NDI1 gene—10 amino acid changes—0 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 462-481—Yeast NDI1 gene—10 amino acid changes—100 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 482-501—Yeast NDI1 gene—10 amino acid changes—200 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 502-521—Yeast NDI1 gene—10 amino acid changes—300 codon changes


SEQ ID NO'S 522-541—Yeast NDI1 gene—10 amino acid changes—329 codon changes


SEQ ID NO: 542—Yeast NDI1 protein—0 amino acid changes





BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES


FIG. 1. Diagrammatic representation of the core construct designs. A: OphNDI1; OphNDI1 (yeast NDI1 gene which has been codon optimized and/or immune optimized) was expressed from the CMV (cytomegalovirus) immediate early promoter. A minimal polyadenylation signal was located at the 3′ end of the NDI1 gene. B: AAV-GDNF; GDNF (glial cell line derived neurotrophic factor) was expressed from the short ubiquitin promoter. The neurturin polyadenylation signal was located at the 3′ end of the GDNF gene. C: AAV-OphNDI1_GDNF; OphNDI1 was expressed from the CMV immediate early promoter. A minimal polyadenylation signal was located at the 3′ end of the NDI1 gene. 3′ to this GDNF was expressed from the short ubiquitin promoter. The neurturin polyadenylation signal was located at the 3′ end of the GDNF gene. D: OphNdiI expressed from a CMV promoter with a 3′ minimal polyadenylation signal. In this construct GDNF is expressed from an IRES and also contains the neurturin Polyadenylation signal.


Notably OphNDI1 may contain 0-10 amino acid substitutions to modulate and immune response or 1-329 altered codons, which are expressed more frequently in mammalian cells than the wild type codons in NDI1 (Table 1a & 1b and Sequence Listing). In addition the CMV and ubiquitin promoters may be substituted for any of the promoters indicated in Tables 2-4 and the GDNF gene may be substituted for any gene indicated in Table 6. Sequences for these core construct designs are presented in Table 1a & 1b and the attached Sequence Listing. Notably, different polyadenalation signals may also be utilised in the constructs described.



FIG. 2. Localisation, function and mRNA expression of NDI1. Western blot analysis of mitochondrial protein isolated from pAAV-NDI1 transfected and untransfected (Ctrl) HeLa cells (A). Top panel shows NDI1 protein expression (56 KDa) and bottom panel shows VDAC1 protein expression (31 KDa, mitochondrial loading control; n=3). B. Bar chart represents oxygen consumption measurements from pAAV-NDI1 transfected (black columns) and pAAV-EGFP transfected (Ctrl, white columns) HeLa cells with (+) and without (no) 5 μmol rotenone (n=6). C. Bar chart represents percentage rotenone insensitive respiration in pAAV-NDI1 transfected (black columns) and pAAV-EGFP transfected (control, white columns) HeLa cells (n=6). D. Retinal NDI1 mRNA expression from adult wild type mice intravitreally injected with 3×108 vp AAV-NDI1 or 3×108 vp AAV-EGFP (Ctrl) and analysed by RT-PCR two weeks post-injection (n=6). Rot insensitive resp (%): Percentage rotenone insensitive respiration, w: water blank, M: size marker; KDa (A), by (D). Error bars represent SD values and *: p<0.001.



FIG. 3. Oxygen consumption measurements from NDI1 transfected HeLa cells. Oxygen consumption measurements from HeLa cells transfected with pAAV-NDI1 (A) and pAAV-EGFP (B) in the presence of 5 μmol rotenone. Oxygen consumption measurements from HeLa cells transfected with pAAV-NDI1 (C) and pAAV-EGFP (D) in the absence of rotenone (control).



FIG. 4
a. Oxygraphs for NDI1 constructs. Traces showing oxygen concentration (blue line) and oxygen consumption (red line) in media treated with 5 μmol rotenone and untransfected HeLa cells (negative control, A), cells transfected with ophNDI1-I82V (B), containing codon-optimisation at 329 codons and the I82V substitution and cells transfected with NDI1-I82V (C). Representative graphs for each are presented. Similarly HeLa cells were transfected with V45I constructs either the codon optimised hNDI1-V45I construct (D) or the wild type NDI1 construct containing the V45I substitution (NDI1-V45I; E). In addition V266I constructs, both NDI1-V266I (F) and hNDI1-V266I (G) were evaluated. The NDI1-F90Y (H) and hNDI1-F90Y (I) construct was also tested in HeLa cells treated with rotenone.



FIG. 4
b. Bar charts of the data sets measuring the change in oxygen consumption from the experiments in FIG. 4a are presented. A statistically significant retention in oxygen consumption was observed between cells transfected with either the NDI1 variant or the hNDI1 variant constructs with p values ranging from p<0.05 (*) to <0.01 (**). A significant difference was observed between the rotenone insensitive respiration achieved with I82V and V45I constructs versus that achieved with the F90Y construct (I82V versus F90Y p<0.02 and V45I versus Y90Y p<0.002). No significant differences were observed between NDI1 treated cells and cells treated with NDI1-I82V, hNDI1-I82V or V45I constructs. However F90Y transfected cells differed significantly compared to NDI1 transfected cells, the latter showing a better retention of oxygen consumption.



FIG. 5. Histology of NDI1 treated retinas following rotenone insult. Adult wild type mice were intravitreally injected into contralateral eyes with 3×108 vp AAV-NDI1 (A) and 1×108 vp AAV-EGFP, to facilitate localisation of transduced regions of the retinas, or 3×108 vp AAV-EGFP (B) alone (n=4). Three weeks post-injection, 1.5 nmol of rotenone was administered intravitrally to both eyes. Three weeks post-rotenone treatment eyes were enucleated, fixed, cryosectioned (12 μm) and processed for immunocytochemistry using NeuN primary and Cy3-conjugated secondary antibodies. Nuclei were counterstained with DAPI. A and B: representative sections show NeuN labelling (red) and nuclear DAPI (blue) signals overlaid. OS: photoreceptor outer segments; ONL: outer nuclear layer; INL: inner nuclear layer; GCL: ganglion cell layer. Scale bar: 20 μm. C: Bar chart representing mean ganglion cell counts per 100 μm. Blue and white columns represent values corresponding to AAV-NDI1+rotenone (NDI1) and AAV-EGFP+rotenone (EGFP), respectively. Error bars represent SD values and ***: p<0.001.



FIG. 6. Ultra-structural analysis of NDI1 treated optic nerves following rotenone insult. Adult wild type mice were intravitrally injected into contralateral eyes with AAV-NDI1 (B) or AAV-EGFP (C and D) (n=3). Three weeks post-injection, 1.5 nmol of rotenone was administered intravitreally to both eyes. Three weeks later eyes were enucleated and optic nerves collected, post-fixed, processed and analysed by transmission electron microscopy. At low magnification electron dense structures (arrow heads, B and C) were less frequent in the AAV-NDI1+rotenone (B) treated samples compared to the AAV-EGFP+rotenone treated samples (C). AAV-EGFP+rotenone treated samples at higher magnification (D). These were not apparent in the untreated samples (A). E: Bar chart representing mean number of membrane debris. Black and white columns represent AAV-NDI1+rotenone (NDI1) and AAV-EGFP+rotenone (EGFP), respectively. F: Bar chart representing mean optic nerve diameter measurements. Optic nerves from identically injected mice were taken nine months post-rotenone treatment, fixed, cryosectioned (12 μm) and the thickness of the optic nerve measured using light microscopy. Black and white columns represent AAV-NDI1+rotenone (NDI1) and AAV-EGFP+rotenone (EGFP), respectively. Error bars represent SD values and **: p<0.01. Scale bars: 10 μm (A, B and C) and 2 μm (D).



FIG. 7. Functional analysis of AAV-NDI1 and AAV-NSG treated optic nerves following rotenone insult. Adult wild type mice were intravitreally injected into the right eye with AAV-NDI1 (n=10) or AAV-NSG (n=6). Three weeks later, AAV-NDI1 (n=10) or AAV-NSG (n=6) injected mice received 1.5 nmol rotenone in the right eye. A further group of adult wild type mice received either DMSO (vehicle control, n=16) or 1.5 nmol rotenone intravitreally injected into the right eye (n=16). Two weeks post rotenone, or DMSO, treatment each mouse was intravitreally injected with 40 μg manganese chloride and manganese enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MEMRI) carried out 2 hrs later. Pseudo-coloured T1-weighted images: Signal enhancement of the mouse visual pathway in oblique sections (36°) from DMSO (A), rotenone alone (B), AAV-NDI1+rotenone (C) and AAV-NSG+rotenone (D) are presented. E: Bar chart representing mean lg signal intensities in the region of the optic chiasm calculated using Image J® software. a.u.: arbitrary unit. Error bars represent SD values and ** represent p<0.01.



FIG. 8. Analysis of spatial vision in NDI treated mice following rotenone insult. Adult wild type mice were intravitrally injected into contralateral eyes with 3×109 vp AAV-NDI1 or 3×109 vp AAV-EGFP. Three weeks post-injection, 1.5 nmol of rotenone was administered intravitreally to both eyes; control mice were not administered with rotenone. Three months post-rotenone treatment optokinetic responses were measured using a virtual optokinetic system. Bar chart represents the mean spatial frequency threshold established for each eye. Black and white columns represent values corresponding to AAV-NDI1+rotenone (NDI1) and AAV-EGFP+rotenone (EGFP), respectively in rotenone treated (+Rotenone) and control (No Rotenone) mice. Error bars represent SD values and ***: p<0.001.



FIG. 9
a. A representative western blot of proteins extracted from HeLa cells transiently transfected with plasmids expressing OphNDI1 and NDI1. A polyclonal antibody for Ndi1 was used to detect OphNDI1 and Ndi1 protein expressed in transfected cells. Lane 1; Ndi1 protein expressed from the original wild type NDI1 construct, Lane 2; Ndi1 with a C-terminal HA tag, Lane 3; Ndi1 protein expressed from OphNDI1, a humanized NDI1 construct with 329 optimised codons, Lane 4; Ndi1 protein expressed from OphNDI1-HA, a humanized Ndi1 with a HA tag. Lane 5; untransfected HeLa cells.



FIG. 9
b: Bar chart showing normalized expression of humanized and wild-type Ndi1 protein as measured by western blot. HeLa cells were transfected with humanized and wild-type Ndi1. Cells were harvested 48 hours post-transfection and protein was extracted and western blotted using a polyclonal anti-Ndi1 primary antibody. Four independent blots were performed and images were captured and analysed with ImageJ® software to measure relative expression. For each blot, the relative expression level of wild-type Ndi1 was taken as a reference and the expression level of humanized Ndi1 was directly compared to it. Paired t-test performed on the non-normalized values indicate that humanized Ndi1 expresses significantly more highly than wild-typeNdI1 (P<0.005). a.u.:arbitrary unit



FIG. 10. Expression from AAV vectors expressing variants of NDI1 AAV vectors were intravitreally injected into wild type mice. AAV vectors contained unmodified NDI1, NSG (expressing both unmodified NDI1 and a GDNF gene), modified NDI1 with a V266I modification, humanised NDI1 (hNDI1), or hNDI1 with a I82V modification. Two weeks post-injection retinas were harvested and total RNA extracted. Real time RT PCRs were performed on RNA samples using primers NDI1F and NDI1R and hNDI1F and hNDI1 R.


A, Levels of NDI1 expressed from unmodified vector (NDI1) and from NSG, which expresses both an unmodified NDI1 gene and a GDNF gene, were compared by real time RT-PCR. Levels of expression (y-axis) are expressed in copy number per unit of the housekeeping gene, β-actin.


B, Levels of humanised NDI1 (hNDI1) expressed in mouse retina delivered invitreally using AAV2/2 vectors were compared to levels of unmodified NDI1 delivered also using AAV2/2. Levels of expression are expressed in copy number per unit of the housekeeping gene β-actin. As expression levels in FIGS. 5A and 5B are expressed in copy number per unit of the housekeeping gene β-actin, expression levels may be compared directly.


C, RT-PCR samples performed on RNA samples extracted from wild type mice which were intravitreally injected with AAV2/2 vectors expressing variants of the NDI1 gene and run on 3% agarose gels. Lanes 1 and 8, GeneRuler 100 bp DNA size ladder (Fermentas). The two lower bands of the ladder represent 100 and 200 bp. Lane 2, NDI1; Lane 3, NSG; Lane 4, NDI1 with V266I modification; Lane 5, NSG; Lane 6, humanised NDI1; Lane 7 Humanised NDI1 with I82V modification. NDI1 amplification product is 87 bp and humanised NDI1 amplification product is 115 bp. Equal amounts of PCR products were loaded into each well. The hNDI1 and NSG vectors resulted in visibly higher levels of expression than the unmodified NDI1 vector mirroring the findings in FIGS. 10a and 10b.



FIG. 11. Immunogenicity predictions of each 9-mer peptide fragment in NDI1, via in silico modelling of antigen presentation using the MHC class I predictor alone (FIG. 11a) or employing the MHC-I pathway using the IEDB proteasomal cleavage/TAP transport/MHC class I combined predictor (FIG. 11b). Immunogenicity scores and amino acid positions are presented.



FIG. 12A. Oxygraphs for NSG constructs Trace showing oxygen concentration (blue line) and oxygen consumption (red line) in media containing untransfected cells (negative control A), cells transfected with wild-type Ndi1 (B) and cells transfected with NSG, a construct expressing both wild-type NDI1 and GDNF (C). In each case, cells were analysed without rotenone and a steady respiration level measured. Once respiration stabilized and a measurement taken, 5 μmol rotenone was added and a measurement of rotenone-insensitive respiration taken once oxygen consumption stabilized.



FIG. 12B: A bar chart of the data from NSG and NDI1 transfected HeLa cells is presented. NSG and NDI1 transfected HeLa cells did not differ significantly from each other p=0.6, however, both significantly retained oxygen consumption compared to untransfected controls (NSG p<0.05 and NDI1 p<0.01).





DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

In the present invention delivery of NDI1 constructs (FIG. 1) has been used to protect cells in the presence of a complex I inhibitor, rotenone, (FIGS. 2-8 and 12), HeLa cells and retinal ganglion cells (RGCs) were protected in the presence of NDI1 delivered as a wild type construct or as codon-optimised and immuno-optimised constructs (FIGS. 2-4). For example, RGCs, the cells primarily affected in LHON, were protected in a rotenone-induced murine model of LHON. Recombinant AAV serotype 2 (AAV2/2) expressing wild type NDI1 from a CMV promoter (AAV-NDI1, FIG. 1A) was administered to mice using a single intravitreal injection. AAV2/2 administered through this route has been shown to infect RGCs efficiently. Moreover, intravitreal injection typically results in a broad area of retinal transduction as the vitreous contacts the entire underlying retinal surface32. Intravitreal injection of AAV provides a route of administration for the gene therapy which is directly applicable to human patients and is routinely used to administer drugs such as Avastin and Lucentis for treatment of wet AMD. In this study, intravitreal injection of AAV-NDI1 was utilised for the first time and was shown significantly to reduce RGC death and optic nerve atrophy seen in untreated eyes in response to rotenone administration and moreover, led to a preservation of retinal function as assessed by manganese enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MEMRI) and optokinetic responses (OKR; FIGS. 5-8).


In the present Application, intravitreal injection of AAV-NDI1 provided substantial protection against rotenone-induced insult, as assessed by a variety of assays (FIGS. 5-8). Notably, histological analyses demonstrated significant protection of both RGCs and the optic nerve (FIGS. 5 and 6). Furthermore, MEMRI indicated that AAV-NDI1 treatment preserved optic nerve function by enabling active transport of manganese ions through the optic nerve using voltage-gated calcium channels and hence provided evidence of the improved functional integrity of the optic nerve tissue in AAV-NDI1 treated eyes compared to control eyes (FIG. 7). Evaluation of visual function by optokinetics showed that the protection of RGCs and optic nerve integrity afforded by AAV-NDI1 led to preservation of mouse vision in the presence of the complex I inhibitor rotenone (FIG. 8). The results highlight the potential therapeutic value of NDI1-based therapies for LHON when intravitreally delivered using AAV2/2.


Following the successful delivery of AAV-NDI1 to RGCs using intravitreal injection, NDI1 was codon optimised so that codons which are used more frequently in mammalian cells were introduced to the NDI1 yeast gene. Codon modifications from 1-329 codons can be implemented to optimize expression of NDI1 in mammals while maintaining wild type amino acids. The maximal number of codons that can be altered in NDI1 to align codons with those most frequently used in mammals is 329 codons and these alterations were employed to generate a construct termed OphNDI1 and also known as humanized NDI1 (hNDI1). Plasmids containing OphNDI1 (hNDI1) or wild type NDI1, both expressed from a cytomegalovirus (CMV) promoter and containing a minimal polyadenylation (PolyA) signal, a modified rabbit beta-globin polyadenylation signal, were transiently transfected into HeLa cells using lipofectamine. Levels of NDI1 protein expression from NDI1 and hNDI1 constructs were compared using Western Blot analysis. hNDI1 (OphNDI1) was determined to express more highly than wild type NDI1 indicating that codon optimising the NDI1 gene has indeed enhanced expression in mammalian cells (FIGS. 9a, 9b and 10). A statistically significant difference in levels of expression was obtained between wild type and optimized NDI1 constructs (FIGS. 9a and 9b). The results obtained for NDI1 protein (FIGS. 9a and 9b) are mirrored by those obtained at the RNA level in mice intravitreally injected with AAV wild type and optimized NDI1 constructs using real-time RT PCR as the assay (FIG. 10).


In addition both the wild type and the codon-optimised NDI1 constructs have been immuno-optimised by introducing one or more amino acid changes to modulate the immune response(s) (Table 1a & 1b and Sequence Listing). Amino acid modifications were undertaken subsequent to in silico analyses for potential immunogenic sites within NDI1 (see FIGS. 11a and 11b, material and methods). Immuno-optimised constructs were generated for both the wild type NDI1 construct and for the codon-optimised hNDI1 construct. Modified codon-optimised and immuno-optimised NDI1 constructs were generated as high titre AAV2/2 vectors (1-5×1011 vg/ml) using triple plasmid transfection methods in 293 cells followed by cesium chloride gradient purification of virus. Representative immuno-optimised NDI1 and immuno-optimised hNDI1 constructs inter alia V45I, I82V, L89I, I90Y, V266I, L481I, L483M were generated as plasmids and or AAV vectors. All nucleated mammalian cells present peptide fragments bound to MHC-I molecules on their cell surface. These fragments are derived from the degradation of proteins in the cytoplasm. As such, MHC-I presentation offers a snapshot of the pool of proteins being produced within each cell. Cytotoxic T-cells inspect the peptide fragments presented by cells and can induce apoptosis in cells presenting non-self proteins, which is usually an indicator of viral infection. HeLa cells were transfected with NDI1, hNDI1 and immuno-optimised constructs and levels of rotenone insensitive respiration evaluated (FIGS. 2-4, 12). Significant retention of oxygen consumption was observed in cells transfected with NDI1, codon-optimised and immuno-optimised constructs (FIGS. 2-4, 12), when compared to untransfected control cells.


In addition, to codon-optimized and immuno-optimized NDI1 constructs, a dual component construct was generated containing the CMV promoter driven NDI1 gene together with a ubiquitin promoter driven glial derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF) gene (NSG), the latter employing a neurturin polyA signal (FIG. 1) and generated as an AAV2/2 vector (AAV-NSG). Significantly higher levels of expression of NDI1 were achieved from this vector in vivo in mice after intravitreal injection compared to AAV-NDI1 as evaluated by real time RT-PCR assays (FIGS. 10a and 10c). GDNF expression from AAV-NSG was confirmed in mouse retinas by real time RT-PCR. Furthermore, intravitreally delivery of AAV-NSG resulted in preservation of cell function as evaluated by oxygen consumption measurements in rotenone treated HeLa cells (FIG. 12) and functional preservation in vivo using MRI analyses of wild type mice intravitreally injected with AAV-NSG vector (FIG. 7). Mean MRI signal intensity for DMSO was 2.38±0.04, for rotenone alone was 2.30±0.06, for AAV-NDI1 plus rotenone was 2.35±0.07 and for AAV-NSG plus rotenone was 2.37±0.07, significant differences were found between the rotenone alone treated mice and those treated with rotenone and either AAV-NDI1 or AAV-NSG; for both rotenone versus AAV-NDI1 and rotenone versus AAV-NSG comparisons, p<0.01 (**). Indeed AAV-NDI1 (plus rotenone) or AAV-NSG (plus rotenone) treated mice did not differ significantly from wild type control mice treated with DMSO alone. Notably these MRI results were established using a 4-fold lower titre of AAV-NSG than AAV-NDI1 (5.99×1011 vp/ml versus 2.5×1011 vp/ml) Suggesting that less AAV-NSG is required to mediate an equivalent beneficial effect.


Cohorts of adult wild type mice were intravitreally injected with 3 ul of AAV2/2 vectors expressing either NDI1, hNDI1, immuno-optimised hNDI1 I82V, immuno-optimised NDI1 V266I or AAV-NSG. Two weeks post-injection retinas were harvested from treated mouse eyes and total RNA extracted. Levels of expression from AAV vectors in mouse retinas were evaluated by real time RT-PCR (FIG. 10). Levels of expression from different vectors could be directly compared as expression was evaluated by absolute copy number per unit of β-actin (the housekeeping control) for each vector. The standard curves were generated using plasmid DNA standards with known copy number. Expression levels achieved after AAV intravitreal injection of vectors were greater in mouse eyes treated with AAV-hNDI1 or AAV-NSG treated eyes compared to AAV-NDI1 injected eyes (FIG. 10).


All gene therapies which deliver non-human proteins risk activation of cytotoxic T-cell responses following presentation of peptide fragments derived from the transgenic protein. It is therefore important to the success of the treatment that immunogenicity of the transgenic protein is modulated. One of the most effective ways this can be done is by searching the sequence of the protein for fragments which are likely to strongly bind MHC-I, increasing the likelihood that they will be presented on the cell surface and so induce an immune reaction.


This approach is complicated somewhat by the presence of many different MHC-I alleles in the human population, each of which may have slightly different binding affinities for different peptides.


There are established bioinformatics methods for predicting the MHC-I binding affinity of a particular peptide, several of which are available as downloadable tools. For our purposes, the consensus prediction method of Nielsen et al (Protein Sci. 2003 May; 12(5):1007-17) was most suitable, in addition to having excellent experimentally-validated accuracy. These tools were adapted and supporting software generated to enable prediction of affinity for a wide variety of MHC-I alleles. The computational tool thus generated may be applied and modified to predict other types of immune responses.


All potential peptide fragments that could be derived from the Ndi1 protein were assayed by the consensus prediction method for binding affinity to all well-characterised human MHC-I proteins.


Methods

Vector Construction and AAV Production


Yeast NDI1 (Accession No: NM001182483.1) was cloned as described53. Briefly, NDI1 was PCR amplified from total yeast DNA extracted from S288c using the following primers F: TTCTCGAGGTAGGGTGTCAGTTTC (SEQ ID NO: 543) and R: AAAGCGGCCGCAGTGATCAACCAATCTTG (SEQ ID NO: 544) and cloned into XhoI and NotI sites of pcDNA3.1- (Invitrogen, Paisley, UK). A minimal poly-adenylation signals4 was cloned downstream of NDI1 using NotI and EcoRV. The CMV immediate early promoter (present in pcDNA3.1-), the NDI1 gene and poly-adenylation signal were isolated on a MluI and EcoRV fragment, end filled and cloned into the NotI sites of pAAV-MCS (Agilent Technologies, La Jolla, Calif., USA) to create pAAV-NDI; FIG. 1. pAAV-EGFP was cloned as previously described19.


The entire human GDNF coding sequence from the atg start codon (nucleotides 201-836 of accession number NM000514) was cloned 3-prime of a 347 bp human Ubiquitin promoter (nucleotides 3557-3904 of accession number D63791) and a human Neurturin polyA consisting of nucleotides 1057-1160 of accession number AL161995 was cloned down-stream of the GDNF gene. This entire ubiquitin-driven GDNF cassette, including Neurturin polyA was cloned downstream of the CMV-driven NDI1 (including the rabbit b-globulin polyA).


Codon optimized NDI1 sequences and/or with amino acid changes to reduce immunogenicity profiles were synthesized by Geneart Inc. These were isolated on a XbaI and XhoI fragment and cloned into pAAV-MCS (Agilent Technologies, La Jolla, Calif., USA) and pcDNA3.1- (Invitrogen, Paisley, UK) plasmids with a CMV immediate early promoter and minimal polyA and verified by DNA sequencing.


Recombinant AAV2/2 viruses, AAV-ND1, AAV-NSG, pAAV-NDI1 V266I, AAV-huNDI1, pAAV-huNDI1 182V and AAV-EGFP were prepared as described20, with a modified cesium chloride gradient as described19 Additional AAV-ND1, AAV-NSG recombinant AAV2/2 viruses were generated by the Gene Vector production Center of Nantes. Genomic titres (DNase-resistant viral particles per milliliter; vp/ml) were determined by quantitative real-time-polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) according to the method of Rohr et al.21


Cell Culture

Human cervical carcinoma cells (HeLa, ATCC accession no. CCL-2) were transfected with pAAV-NDI1 or pAAV-EGFP using Lipofectamine 2000 reagent, according to the manufacturer's instructions (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, Calif., USA). 5×105 cells per well were seeded onto 6-well plates containing 1 ml Dulbecco's modified Eagle medium supplemented with 10% calf serum, 2 mM glutamine and 1 mM sodium pyruvate and incubated overnight at 37° C. Media was then aspirated and the cells were washed twice with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Each well was transfected with 1 μg pAAV-NDI1 or 1 μg pAAV-EGFP in triplicate. Cells were harvested 48 hrs later and the cells from each triplicate pooled for an individual experiment, each experiment was repeated in triplicate.


Mitochondrial Isolation and Western Blot Analysis

Mitochondria were isolated from HeLa cells using Anti-TOM22 microbeads (Mitochondria isolation kit, Miltenyi Biotec GmbH, Germany). Isolated mitochondria were washed twice in PBS and homogenised in 100 μl radioimmunoprecipitation assay (RIPA) buffer (150 mM NaCl, 1% Triton X-100, 0.5% sodium deoxycholate, 0.1% SDS, 50 mM TrisCl pH 8.0 and 1 protease inhibitor cocktail tablet/10 mls (Roche, Mannheim, Germany)). The homogenate was centrifuged at 10,000 g for 20 min at 4° C. and the supernatant removed for analysis. Normalised protein samples were separated on 12% polyacrylamide gels and electrophoretically transferred to PVDF membranes (Bio-Rad, Berkley, Calif., USA). The PVDF membrane was blocked with 5% non-fat milk in tris buffered saline (TBS, 0.05M Tris, 150 mM NaCl, pH 7.5) and 0.05% (vol/vol) Tween 20 for 1 hr at room temperature. Rabbit polyclonal antibodies to NDI1 (1:500, Cambridge Research Biochemicals, Cleveland, UK) and VDAC1 (1:1000, Abcam, Cambridge, UK) were diluted in 5% milk and incubated overnight at 4° C. Membranes were washed twice with TBS and incubated with a secondary anti-rabbit (IgG) horseradish peroxidise-conjugated antibody (1:2500, Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis Mo., USA) for 2 hr at room temperature, exposed to Super-Signal chemiluminescent substrate and enhancer (Pierce Biotechnology, Rochford, Ill., USA) and signal detected using X-ray film (Kodak, Rochester, N.Y., USA). All Western blots were repeated three times.


Respiratory Analysis

Respiratory measurements were performed in DMEM at 37° C. on an Oxygraph-2k (OROBOROS® INSTRUMENTS GmbH, Innsbruck, Austria) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Briefly, each chamber was calibrated with 2 mls DMEM and stirred (200 rpm) for 1 hr to saturate the media with oxygen. Parallel experiments were run in the two chambers of the Oxygraph-2k using 1×106 pAAV-NDI1 or 1×106 pAAV-EGFP transfected HeLa cells. Following the addition of cells to the oxygen saturated media the chamber size was reduced to 2 ml to remove air. Continuous readings were taken to establish the fully oxygenated baseline. 2 ul 5 mM rotenone (5 μM in 100% ethanol) was added to 1×106 pAAV-NDI1 or 1×106 pAAV-EGFP transfected HeLa cells prior to transfer to the requisite chambers and continuous post-rotenone readings taken. Continuous readings were taken both with and without rotenone until oxygen consumption stabilised. Readings were taken from three independent transfections for each construct.


Animals and Intravitreal Injections

Wild type 129 S2/SvHsd (Harlan UK Ltd, Oxfordshire, UK) mice were maintained under specific pathogen free (spf) housing conditions. Intravitreal injections were carried out in strict compliance with the European Communities Regulations 2002 and 2005 (Cruelty to Animals Act) and the Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology (ARVO) statement for the use of animals. Briefly, adult mice were anaesthetised and pupils dilated as described57. Using topical anaesthesia (Amethocaine), a small puncture was made in the sclera. A 34-gauge blunt-ended microneedle attached to a 10 μl Hamilton syringe was inserted through the puncture, and 0.6 μl 2.5 mM rotenone (1.5 nmol) in dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO, vehicle), 0.6 μl DMSO alone or 3 μl 1×1012 vp/ml AAV2/2 was slowly, over a two minute period, administered into the vitreous. Following intravitreal injection, an anesthetic reversing agent (100 mg/10 g body weight; Atipamezole Hydrochloride) was delivered by intraperitoneal injection. Body temperature was maintained using a homeothermic heating device. All animal studies have been approved by the authors' Institutional Review Board.


RNA Extraction and PCR Analysis

Adult wild type mice (n=6) were intravitrally injected with 3×109 vp AAV-NDI1 while fellow eyes received 3×109 vp AAV-EGFP. Retinas were harvested two weeks post-injection and total RNA extracted using the Qiagen RNeasy kit according to the manufacturers specification. In vivo expression of NDI1 from AAV-NDI1 was confirmed by reverse transcription PCR (RT-PCR) on a 7300 Real Time PCR System (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, Calif., USA) using a QuantiTect SYBR Green RT-PCR kit (Qiagen Ltd., Crawley, UK) and resulting amplification products separated and sized on 2.5% agarose gels. The following primers were used: NDI1 forward primer 5′ CACCAGTTGGGACAGTAGAC 3′ (SEQ ID NO: 545) and NDI1 reverse primer: 5′ CCTCATAGTAGGTAACGTTC 3′ (SEQ ID NO: 546). Humanised forms of NDI1 transcript were RT-PCR amplified with hNDI1 forward primer 5′ GAACACCGTGACCATCAAGA 3′ and hNDI1 reverse primer 5′ GCTGATCAGGTAGTCGTACT 3′ β-actin was used as an internal control as described (ref). RT-PCRs were performed twice in triplicate or quadruplicate. Levels of NDI1 or humanised NDI1 expression were determined by real time RT PCR using the Quantitect SYBR green RT PCR kit (Qiagen). Briefly, the copy number of two plasmid DNA preparations containing either NDI1 or humanized NDI1 was determined by spectraphotometry on a NanoDrop and serial dilutions of these plasmid DNA preparations were prepared containing between 10e2-10e7 copies/μl. These standard curves were included in 96-well plates that also included RNA samples to be analysed. Hence expression levels from all constructs, whether humanized or not, could be compared using absolute copy number, even though the primer pairs used for non humanized and humanized PCR amplification were not the same. Expression levels were normalized using the internal housekeeping gene β-actin.


Histology

Eyes and optic nerves were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS (pH 7.4) overnight at room 4° C. washed three times with PBS and cryoprotected using a sucrose gradient (10%, 20%, 30%). 10 μm sections were cut on a cryostat (HM 500 Microm, Leica, Solms, Germany) at −20° C. Nuclei were counterstained with 4′,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI). Specimens were analysed with a Zeiss Axiophot fluorescence microscope (Carl Zeiss, Oberkochen, Germany). Corresponding microscope images taken with different filters were overlaid using Photoshop v. 10 (Adobe Systems Europe, Glasgow, UK). For ganglion cell (GCL) counts the ganglion cells were labelled using NeuN (Abcam, Cambridge, UK) immunohistochemistry as previously described. The primary antibody was diluted 1:100 and visualised using cy3-conjugated anti-mouse-IgG secondary antibody (Jackson ImmunoResearch Europe, Suffolk, UK). Four retinal sections per eye from four mice per group were analysed (n=4). The sections were taken approximately 150 μm apart in the central retina (600 μm span in total); 2 counts per section i.e. 8 counts per eye in total, were made using the count tool in Photoshop (Adobe systems). The diameter of the optic nerves was determined at approximately 5 mm from the optic nerve head from 3 animals per group (n=3). Three measurements per nerve were made approximately 150 μm apart using the ruler tool in Photoshop (Adobe Systems). Procedures for TEM were as previously described. Briefly, three weeks post-rotenone injection optic nerves were fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde in phosphate-buffered solution and fixed in 2.5% glutaraldehyde in 0.1M cacodylate buffer (pH 7.3) for 2 hr at room temperature. Washed specimens were post-fixed in buffered 2% osmium tetroxide, dehydrated and embedded in araldite. Ultrathin cross-sections were cut on a vibratome (Leica VT 1000 S), analysed using a Tecnai 12 BioTwin transmission electron microscope (FEI, Eindhoven, Holland) and imaged with a SIS MegaView III surface channel charge-coupled device (SCCD) camera (Olympus Soft Imaging Solutions, Münster, Germany). The total number of membrane debris particles in the images was counted in 5 cross sections per optic nerve from 3 animals per group (n=3).


Magnetic Resonance Imaging

Optic nerve integrity in experimental and control mice was assessed by Manganese (Mn2+) enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (MEMRI) technique using a 7 T Bruker Biospec 70/30 magnet (Bruker Biospin, Etlingen, Germany). MEMRI demarcates active regions of the brain due to the ability of Mn2+ ions to enter excitable cells through voltage-gated calcium channels, thus analysis of Mn2+ transport through the optic nerve provides a good measure of its integrity. Two hours prior to scanning, mice were anaesthetised and intravitreally injected, as described above, with 2 μl of 20 mg/ml manganese chloride solution. For image acquisition, mice were maintained under sedation with ketamine (375 μg/10 g body weight) and placed on an MRI-compatible cradle which maintains the animal's body temperature at 37° C. (respiration and temperature were monitored for the duration of experiment). The cradle was positioned within the MRI scanner and an initial rapid pilot image acquired to ensure accurate positioning of the mouse. Oblique coronal T1-weighted 2D images were acquired using FLASH sequence (TR/TE:150/2.5 ms; Matrix: 128×128; Field of View: 20×20 mm2; Flip Angle 50°; number of averages: 40, the pixel resolution was 0.156 mm/pixel). In the oblique coronal orientation (36°), 20 slices, each measuring 0.35 mm in thickness with 0.45 mm inter slice gap, were recorded for an acquisition time of 9 min 36 sec. MRI scans corresponding to the area immediately superior to the optic chiasm provided more consistent images compared to the optic nerve itself due to the variations in physically positioning each animal. Log signal intensities in this region were quantified using Image J© software (http://imagej.nih.gov/ij/).


Optokinetics

Optokinetic response (OKR) spatial frequency thresholds were measured blind by two independent researchers using a virtual optokinetic system (VOS, OptoMotry, CerebralMechanics, Lethbridge, AB, Canada). OptoMotry36 measures the threshold of the mouse's optokinetic tracking response to moving gratings. Briefly, a virtual-reality chamber is created with four 17 inch computer monitors facing into a square and the unrestrained mouse was placed on a platform in the centre. A video camera, situated above the animal, provided real-time video feedback. The experimenter centred the virtual drum on the mouse's head and judged whether the mouse made slow tracking movements with its head and neck. The spatial frequency threshold, the point at which the mouse no longer tracked, was obtained by incrementally increasing the spatial frequency of the grating at 100% contrast. A staircase procedure was used in which the step size was halved after each reversal, and terminated when the step size became smaller than the hardware resolution (˜0.003 c/d, 0.2% contrast). One staircase was presented for each direction of rotation to measure each eye separately, with the two staircases being interspersed.


Statistical Analysis

Data sets of treated and untreated samples were pooled, averaged and standard deviation (SD) values calculated. Statistical significance of differences between data sets was determined by either Student's two-tailed t-test or ANOVA used with Tukey's multiple comparison post hoc test. In addition, the Kruskall-Wallis one-way analysis of variance was applied to the MRI data set and Mann Whitney U-tests were undertaken on all other data sets to establish that statistical significance was maintained using nonparametric statistical models. Analysis was performed using Prism v. 5.0 c (GraphPad Software, La Jolla, Calif., USA); differences with p<0.05 were considered statistically significant


Predictions of Immunogenic Codons

All potential peptide fragments that could be derived from the Ndi1 protein were assayed by the consensus prediction method for binding affinity to all well-characterised human MHC-I proteins. All epitopes displaying a high affinity for MHC-I (defined as a predicted IC50<500 nM) were noted, along with the corresponding MHC-I allele to which they had displayed high binding affinity. Each potential peptide fragment was then assigned an ‘immunogenicity score’, defined as the sum of the frequencies of all MHC-I alleles in the global human population for which it had a high binding affinity. The highest-scoring fragments were then selected for potential modification to reduce immunogenicity. All possible single amino acid mutations for each of these immunogenic fragment sequences were generated, and each was assayed for immunogenicity by the above methods. In addition, the BLOSUM62 matrix was used to calculate the sequence similarity between the original and mutated sequences. For each fragment, an optimal immunogenicity-reducing mutation was chosen. This was done by taking the set of all potential mutations for that fragment and eliminating all fragments which had an immunogenicity score greater than half of the immunogenicity score of the original fragment. The sequence with the highest sequence similarity to the original fragment (as defined by the BLOSUM62 matrix) was selected as the optimal substitution for that position.


In addition to the analyses described above using information regarding MHC-1 alone, immunogenicity estimation and reduction in Ndi1 was achieved via in silico modelling of antigen presentation via the MHC-I pathway using the IEDB proteasomal cleavage/TAP transport/MHC class I combined predictor.


As fragments of 9 amino acids in length are the most commonly presented fragments by MHC-I, all possible sequences of 9 consecutive amino acids that could be derived from Ndi1 were listed and passed to the IEDB predictor for analysis. For every 9-mer peptide P and MHC-I allele i, an immunogenicity value Gp,i was generated which is proportional to the amount of that fragment that would be displayed on the cell surface by a given MHC-I allele, taking into account proteasomal degradation, transport and binding by MHC-I.


An overall immunogenicity factor Fp for the 9-mer peptide was then calculated as







F
p

=



i




G

p
,
i




N
i







where Ni is the estimated prevalence of each allele in the global human population as a fraction of the total pool of alleles, calculated using population frequency data from The Allele Frequency Net Database (Gonzalez-Galarza et al, 2011). In other words, Fp represents the mean amount of that fragment that would be displayed on the surface of a cell for all MHC-I alleles, weighted by how frequently each allele occurs in the human population.


Each amino acid position A in the Ndi1 peptide was then assigned an immunogenicity score SA defined as the sum of the immunogenicity factors for all 9-mer peptides containing that amino acid. All positions whose immunogenicity score was less than one-fifth of the highest score were not considered further, as mutations at these positions would not be able to significantly affect the overall immunogenicity of the protein.


For each of the remaining positions, a BLOSUM matrix (Henikoff and Henikoff, 1992) was used to identify potential mutations that would not be overly disruptive to the structure or function of Ndi1. A BLOSUM matrix is calculated by aligning homologous protein sequences from many species against each other, and comparing the frequency with which each amino acid is replaced by every other amino acid.


For two amino acids x and y, the BLOSUM score Bx,y is defined as the log-likelihood of the amino acid x replacing y or vice-versa in a given position in homologous peptides. As a direct consequence of this definition, Bx,y=By,x for all x and y (in other words, all BLOSUM matrices are symmetric).


A high BLOSUM score for an amino-acid pair indicates that mutations changing one of those amino acids to the other are more likely to be observed in homologous proteins, indicating that such changes are less likely to severely disrupt protein structure. A BLOSUM score can also be calculated between each amino acid and itself (Bx,x), indicating the likelihood that that amino acid will remain constant between homologous proteins.


For all possible mutations at a given position, ΔB was defined as the change in the BLOSUM score for that mutation. More formally, given an initial amino acid x and a candidate replacement amino acid y, ΔB=Bx,x−Bx,y. All mutations for which ΔB was greater than 4 were considered too disruptive to protein function and not analysed further.


For all remaining candidate mutations, immunogenicity factors F and scores S were recalculated for the post-mutation peptide using the IEDB predictor. The reduction in immunogenicity ΔS was then determined, defined as the difference between the score S for that position in the original peptide versus the new score S after mutation.


All possible mutations were then ranked by the metric








Δ





S


Δ





B


.




High values of







Δ





S


Δ





B





represent mutations which are likely to cause a large reduction in immunogenicity with a relatively small predicted impact on protein function. Outputs with predicted amino acids and scores are provided in Table X.


The invention is not limited to the embodiments hereinbefore described which may be varied in construction and detail without departing from the spirit of the invention.


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  • 22. Kormann M S, Hasenpusch G, Aneja M K, Nica G, Flemmer A W, Herber-Jonat S, Huppmann M, Mays L E, Illenyi M, Schams A, Griese M, Bittmann I, Handgretinger R, Hartl D, Rosenecker J, Rudolph C. Expression of therapeutic proteins after delivery of chemically modified mRNA in mice. Nat. Biotechnol. 2011 February; 29 (2):154-7. doi: 10.1038/nbt.1733. Epub 2011 Jan. 9.

  • 23. Chaput J C, Yu H, Zhang S. The emerging world of synthetic genetics. Chem. Biol. 2012 Nov. 21; 19 (11):1360-71. doi: 10.1016/j.chembiol.2012.10.011.



APPENDIX









TABLE 1a







Nucleic acid and amino acid sequences of the Invention.










Amino Acid 
Nucleic Acid 


Gene
Substitution
Sequence





Yeast NDI1
FYLWRILYL
SEQ ID NO: 1





Yeast NDI1 codon
FYLWRILYL
SEQ ID NO: 62


optimised







Yeast NDI1 + 1amino
FYLWRILYL →
SEQ ID NO: 63


acid change
FYLWRILYM






Yeast NDI1 codon
FYLWRILYL →
SEQ ID NO: 134


optimized + 1 amino
FYLWRILYM



acid change







Yeast NDI1 + 2 amino
FYLWRILYL →
SEQ ID NO: 146


acid change
FYLWRILYM




FLKEIPNSL →




FFKEIPNSL






Yeast NDI1 codon
FYLWRILYL →
SEQ ID NO: 225


optimized + 2 amino
FYLWRILYM



acid change
FLKEIPNSL →




FFKEIPNSL






















TABLE 1b











Immunochange/


Initial
Position
New
Immunoscore
Immunochange
Blosumchange
Blosumchange





















I
82
V
2.569262982
1.002693684
2
0.501346842


F
90
Y
1.926170105
1.497108683
3
0.499036228


L
89
I
2.104411858
1.253907982
3
0.417969327


V
266
I
0.667339713
0.362552877
1
0.362552877


K
214
E
0.712950213
0.70677809
4
0.176694523


L
481
I
0.885723713
0.498012741
3
0.166004247


L
202
M
0.608956047
0.315494717
2
0.157747359


L
259
V
0.594189679
0.469145841
3
0.156381947


L
195
I
0.565666654
0.465061673
3
0.155020558


I
81
V
0.852520887
0.266903644
2
0.133451822


L
150
M
0.656551833
0.259100799
2
0.129550399


R
85
K
2.714843954
0.43039463
4
0.107598657


Y
151
F
0.686249712
0.397772899
4
0.099443225


Y
482
F
0.891857027
0.37332648
4
0.09333162


S
488
T
0.562058188
0.361418691
4
0.090354673


S
80
T
0.674070843
0.301172594
4
0.075293149


K
196
E
0.618739275
0.284207587
4
0.071051897


R
206
K
0.780227471
0.247789757
4
0.061947439


R
490
K
0.590906411
0.237769694
4
0.059442424


S
145
T
0.67224222
0.225480169
4
0.056370042


V
147
T
0.671708207
0.210263616
4
0.052565904


R
479
K
1.226655337
0.210156887
4
0.052539222


A
489
S
0.587738848
0.201645996
4
0.050411499


L
212
V
0.717379457
0.144498379
3
0.048166126


R
492
K
0.564269712
0.191259766
4
0.047814941


L
262
M
0.596470347
0.084255646
2
0.042127823


Q
149
E
0.656724126
0.167775872
4
0.041943968


T
207
S
0.779275641
0.162365948
4
0.040591487


Y
476
F
1.203763001
0.154940174
4
0.038735043


S
201
T
0.598628015
0.145693616
4
0.036423404


S
86
A
2.752011125
0.111576956
4
0.027894239


M
473
L
0.621739886
0.108503212
4
0.027125803


E
265
Q
0.583898093
0.099401686
4
0.024850422


E
264
Q
0.583540076
0.086415603
4
0.021603901


S
148
A
0.642943664
0.069504199
4
0.01737605


A
261
S
0.592734437
0.053926096
4
0.013481524


A
209
S
0.725497927
0.039698254
4
0.009924564


E
213
Q
0.71301777
0.004330404
4
0.001082601





Initial: The amino acid at this position in the native protein


Position: Position in the protein


New: Replacement amino acid suggested by the program


Immunoscore: Immunoscore for this locus in the native protein.


Immunochange: Change in immunoscore between the native and the modified locus.


Blosumchange: The change in BLOSUM score between the native and the modified position (a measure of how conservative the change is, lower numbers being more conservative)


Immunochange/Blosumchange: The change in immunogenicity divided by the blosum change.













TABLE 1c







Output from immunogenicity analyses











position
totalscore
mhcscore
tapscore
proteasomescore














0
0.000165143
11.14069809
0.44351918
9.06162E−05


1
0.041457346
11.40019829
2.86360034
0.003448543


2
0.002426595
15.73665433
7.707479979
5.46497E−05


3
0.002526801
24.94091632
4.435191796
6.27721E−05


4
0.005897232
16.1032081
6.122268966
0.000162811


5
0.00032745
12.79123286
1.221553255
5.69915E−05


6
7.91604E−05
15.37844434
0.168621289
8.22938E−05


7
0.000166722
13.39406509
0.702930528
4.84144E−05


8
0.000109826
14.68630033
0.533227336
3.79468E−05


9
0.000316701
11.14069809
1.308917895
5.83262E−05


10
0.123430476
22.74638603
6.264874929
0.002349837


11
0.097134418
17.65681657
2.552186489
0.005899826


12
0.048628469
20.27273789
7.532036315
0.000863136


13
0.046499396
20.74495061
21.22816259
0.000286354


14
0.001693195
20.74495061
0.926642906
0.000243003


15
2.94196E−05
11.40019829
0.150283882
4.66216E−05


16
0.000555893
11.14069809
0.845108374
0.000157342


17
0.062993668
16.4783
9.055499382
0.001146233


18
0.000129314
12.79123286
0.212281626
0.000129245


19
0.000372025
11.93747308
1.250006885
6.79306E−05


20
0.000170764
11.40019829
0.656012939
6.24617E−05


21
0.017125463
13.39406509
2.437319175
0.00142792


22
8.29984E−05
14.68630033
0.360505924
4.22373E−05


23
0.000159095
14.02530793
0.558357566
5.49707E−05


24
3.85269E−05
12.50006885
0.222286151
3.77629E−05


25
0.000126872
14.68630033
0.533227336
4.48928E−05


26
0.000210364
11.14069809
0.970314241
5.24778E−05


27
5.09001E−05
9.929157627
0.352299807
 4.009E−05


28
0.000168829
8.070722319
1.537844434
3.71193E−05


29
0.000363844
10.16043742
0.671293443
0.000146293


30
2.06189E−05
11.66574302
0.127912329
3.82109E−05


31
0.022132896
17.65681657
16.1032081
0.000209655


32
0.027879223
8.84937105
2.494091632
0.003429894


33
0.000123359
11.14069809
0.641080261
4.68999E−05


34
0.000806311
20.74495061
1.891961982
 5.6086E−05


35
0.000356829
11.14069809
1.806809666
4.82049E−05


36
0.00055883
18.4889567
1.308917895
6.21902E−05


37
0.00163762
14.68630033
2.734717094
0.00010891


38
0.000115249
22.22861507
0.336443704
4.12917E−05


39
0.000191343
7.88701025
1.765681657
3.74729E−05


40
0.000491116
6.712934432
1.537844434
0.000129807


41
0.000677471
18.06809666
1.166574302
8.70739E−05


42
3.36856E−05
11.14069809
0.207449506
3.88118E−05


43
0.00014483
21.22816259
0.377496044
4.85281E−05


44
0.003264254
7.360586237
2.93030216
0.000402442


45
0.000140007
7.707479979
1.402530793
 3.521E−05


46
3.62244E−05
11.40019829
0.232762174
3.73826E−05


47
0.000348616
16.1032081
1.339406509
4.33022E−05


48
0.004074612
34.42804843
3.774960444
8.44971E−05


49
0.001131584
11.66574302
2.122816259
0.000123023


50
0.002085286
19.81127403
3.213012427
8.89479E−05


51
4.51837E−05
10.39710441
0.32878531
3.62723E−05


52
3.03008E−05
14.68630033
0.114001983
4.98593E−05


53
3.76548E−05
10.88710484
0.261163455
 3.596E−05


54
0.001659218
2.79123286
4.139161818
8.50937E−05


55
0.000149148
14.02530793
0.545647796
5.22381E−05


56
0.004171506
12.50006885
1.166574302
0.000776349


57
0.006443566
14.35199932
2.611634549
0.000465797


58
3.34281E−05
14.68630033
0.133940651
4.56139E−05


59
0.037127736
11.93747308
16.1032081
0.00052448


60
0.00663909
19.81127403
3.952868849
0.000229639


61
0.006458684
9.266429059
2.494091632
0.000758499


62
0.000340528
20.27273789
0.702930528
6.40334E−05


63
0.002881924
17.65681657
2.494091632
0.000178119


64
7.61656E−05
14.68630033
0.336443704
4.10584E−05


65
0.000209237
7.88701025
1.140019829
6.41994E−05


66
0.005967534
9.703142406
3.364437037
0.000493477


67
0.001955737
9.266429059
2.552186489
0.000221532


68
0.017604909
20.27273789
29.98557666
7.89816E−05


69
8.35826E−05
11.14069809
0.558357566
3.65261E−05


70
0.002594439
19.36031438
2.172263001
0.000165466


71
3.00088E−05
16.86212891
0.122155325
3.90383E−05


72
0.000919044
11.66574302
2.027273789
0.000106306


73
0.000624075
10.88710484
2.494091632
6.17683E−05


74
6.33881E−05
11.40019829
0.249409163
6.13181E−05


75
0.000697186
9.929157627
2.672467333
7.11732E−05


76
0.015140398
10.39710441
7.360586237
0.000539173


77
6.53066E−05
16.86212891
0.19811274
5.41402E−05


78
0.312040853
26.72467333
42.35575283
0.000759428


79
0.344490583
12.79123286
27.98416838
0.002643626


80
0.178480054
26.11634549
5.210895997
0.003561048


81
1.717661138
12.21553255
21.72263001
0.017177042


82
0.001404259
20.74495061
0.671293443
0.000273623


83
0.000277344
13.39406509
1.468630033
3.83701E−05


84
0.145284018
12.50006885
5.98290911
0.005274918


85
0.052307569
15.73665433
7.532036315
0.001198564


86
0.000858248
9.482271919
2.274638603
0.000108393


87
0.007596331
13.39406509
0.172548984
0.008925249


88
0.000542897
16.86212891
0.992915763
8.77791E−05


89
0.000238301
8.258713592
1.686212891
4.70592E−05


90
0.006680505
9.929157627
1.502838821
0.001238526


91
6.22969E−05
15.73665433
0.267246733
4.00927E−05


92
0.000881673
23.81839017
0.702930528
0.000142668


93
0.011560202
14.35199932
1.725489835
0.001248935


94
5.48864E−05
22.22861507
0.184889567
3.67735E−05


95
6.20843E−05
13.70605295
0.32878531
3.78829E−05


96
0.000404981
8.84937105
2.552186489
4.90042E−05


97
2.28667E−05
14.35199932
0.122155325
 3.5317E−05


98
0.000413407
14.02530793
1.891961982
4.16191E−05


99
0.000498189
9.266429059
2.611634549
5.58373E−05


100
7.19144E−05
15.37844434
0.313987533
4.02088E−05


101
0.000134928
8.070722319
1.250006885
3.66345E−05


102
0.001767121
10.16043742
1.84889567
0.000253395


103
0.000489226
16.4783
1.686212891
4.78379E−05


104
0.000140668
17.25489835
0.464421595
4.76012E−05


105
0.489070827
0.68403046
29.3030216
0.001466533


106
0.001456535
13.39406509
1.016043742
0.000286335


107
0.031214534
14.68630033
3.862890569
0.001494362


108
0.000379244
6.264874929
1.725489835
9.6805E−05


109
0.002898725
11.66574302
1.686212891
0.000399516


110
0.014553946
9.482271919
2.437319175
0.001712156


111
7.03894E−05
12.21553255
0.423557528
3.71112E−05


112
9.96662E−05
13.08917895
0.584672147
3.58761E−05


113
0.001309179
11.66574302
2.552186489
0.000120062


114
0.000377961
15.73665433
0.864793477
7.53049E−05


115
0.164165075
20.272737893
7.74960444
0.000583111


116
0.070071877
12.791232863
7.74960444
0.000394384


117
0.000102335
18.4889567
0.377496044
4.00326E−05


118
0.000736796
13.39406509
0.825871359
0.00018023


119
8.86678E−05
21.22816259
0.299855767
3.78003E−05


120
0.000604388
12.50006885
1.088710484
0.000120905


121
0.000474711
16.4783
1.166574302
6.72969E−05


122
8.14247E−05
12.50006885
0.279841684
6.27394E−05


123
0.005779158
13.39406509
3.139875335
0.000379657


124
0.000168565
13.08917895
0.368903185
9.40827E−05


125
0.000141599
7.707479979
1.279123286
 3.8882E−05


126
0.000109895
18.06809666
0.232762174
7.09543E−05


127
0.004081875
13.08917895
7.029305285
0.000120226


128
7.74925E−05
12.50006885
0.423557528
3.95401E−05


129
0.000199484
12.50006885
1.039710441
4.15659E−05


130
0.004654394
22.22861507
2.494091632
0.000231783


131
0.000117283
11.40019829
0.736058624
3.76417E−05


132
0.00250937
16.4783
1.806809666
0.000226837


133
0.000243602
11.66574302
1.435199932
3.90759E−05


134
 2.0194E−05
11.93747308
0.122155325
3.74976E−05


135
0.00240769
23.81839017
3.952868849
6.94385E−05


136
7.18825E−05
13.39406509
0.2172263
6.62302E−05


137
0.000671558
15.37844434
1.221553255
9.76814E−05


138
0.029149146
12.79123286
2.552186489
0.002447701


139
0.000108191
19.81127403
0.202727379
7.34916E−05


140
0.000380177
14.35199932
1.61032081
4.46669E−05


141
0.042994713
19.36031438
5.092281523
0.001177354


142
0.597914802
11.66574302
36.05059237
0.003851289


143
0.000525873
11.40019829
1.64783
7.55946E−05


144
0.000425877
9.703142406
2.274638603
5.15599E−05


145
9.51453E−05
11.14069809
0.48630911
4.83954E−05


146
0.000114282
13.08917895
0.558357566
4.28532E−05


147
0.000384603
13.70605295
1.166574302
6.50063E−05


148
0.013888653
26.72467333
5.713633843
0.000249234


149
0.000207884
11.40019829
0.497636704
0.000101384


150
0.072692591
21.22816259
4.644215946
0.001979696


151
9.13848E−05
8.451083744
0.598290911
4.90765E−05


152
0.000194321
18.91961982
0.686929876
4.05995E−05


153
0.000147665
13.39406509
0.598290911
4.97643E−05


154
5.96976E−05
12.21553255
0.313987533
 4.2448E−05


155
0.000304364
10.39710441
1.64783
4.72171E−05


156
0.000232098
14.02530793
0.736058624
6.09429E−05


157
4.49655E−05
9.055499382
0.321301243
4.26164E−05


158
0.001052342
14.02530793
2.672467333
7.64658E−05


159
0.002645292
15.73665433
2.734717094
0.000166845


160
0.019386533
18.06809666
27.98416838
0.000104775


161
0.000112838
32.13012427
0.255218649
3.72481E−05


162
0.419893137
15.73665433
21.72263001
0.003405842


163
0.000458265
14.68630033
2.074495061
4.12016E−05


164
0.054611893
10.16043742
2.611634549
0.005646639


165
5.99504E−05
19.36031438
0.189196198
4.45628E−05


166
0.001318468
16.4783
1.063928408
0.000205305


167
0.002095732
11.93747308
2.734717094
0.000173505


168
0.000184796
16.1032081
0.395286885
8.01508E−05


169
0.000275482
16.86212891
0.884937105
4.99016E−05


170
0.000167236
12.79123286
0.321301243
0.000110242


171
0.000342173
8.451083744
1.981127403
 5.5619E−05


172
8.79781E−05
10.39710441
0.509228152
4.60152E−05


173
0.000211548
12.50006885
0.992915763
4.64314E−05


174
0.032232237
18.91961982
24.94091632
0.00018851


175
6.05564E−05
10.39710441
0.395286885
4.00369E−05


176
0.000998841
15.37844434
2.222861507
7.93173E−05


177
0.000264653
7.193038838
1.765681657
5.59102E−05


178
0.000139596
9.482271919
0.261163455
0.000152375


179
0.000296116
21.22816259
0.970314241
3.91975E−05


180
0.000327858
13.08917895
0.807072232
8.48754E−05


181
0.000152819
34.42804843
0.306840305
3.93781E−05


182
0.098588371
16.4783
23.27621742
0.000703772


183
5.50708E−05
10.16043742
0.344280484
4.24145E−05


184
0.000330822
15.02838821
0.598290911
9.79903E−05


185
0.001918516
11.40019829
10.63928408
4.24955E−05


186
0.017374938
24.94091632
3.442804843
0.000549449


187
0.079255802
9.055499382
2.222861507
0.010928806


188
7.19099E−05
13.70605295
0.313987533
4.57906E−05


189
0.002203253
14.02530793
2.274638603
0.000187553


190
0.000119875
6.869298762
1.221553255
 3.8427E−05


191
7.12456E−05
11.66574302
0.395286885
4.19525E−05


192
4.19024E−05
11.66574302
0.184889567
5.21066E−05


193
0.466489514
24.37319175
3.862890569
0.013431024


194
3.82148E−05
10.16043742
0.286360034
3.59508E−05


195
0.070447558
16.4783
3.068403046
0.003829724


196
0.003421942
15.37844434
7.360586237
8.21109E−05


197
0.001734764
16.86212891
4.235575283
6.57536E−05


198
7.34401E−05
13.39406509
0.433423451
3.46408E−05


199
0.055210676
21.22816259
19.81127403
0.00035693


200
0.001170004
20.27273789
1.039710441
0.000150667


201
0.010369934
19.81127403
0.970314241
0.001476792


202
9.92438E−05
9.929157627
0.453850068
6.05564E−05


203
0.004408103
15.02838821
4.752393632
0.000167575


204
0.000153088
12.50006885
0.533227336
6.29582E−05


205
0.707008218
12.79123286
4.235575283
0.036236842


206
0.000782934
20.74495061
1.308917895
7.86962E−05


207
0.00011326
15.02838821
0.433423451
4.65875E−05


208
0.001393141
14.35199932
4.334234505
6.15443E−05


209
0.001849097
14.35199932
5.092281523
6.92015E−05


210
0.000271964
9.055499382
1.936031438
4.21008E−05


211
0.001399652
9.703142406
2.672467333
0.000146581


212
4.64163E−05
9.266429059
0.377496044
3.67224E−05


213
8.55306E−05
25.52186489
0.243731918
3.79314E−05


214
0.000156546
5.98290911
2.027273789
3.50463E−05


215
7.72511E−05
11.14069809
0.433423451
4.31182E−05


216
0.002519187
11.93747308
8.451083744
6.70433E−05


217
0.001880782
22.74638603
5.583575658
3.99758E−05


218
0.001112268
20.74495061
4.235575283
 3.4321E−05


219
0.000864187
20.74495061
2.672467333
4.29883E−05


220
0.001042542
23.27621742
2.86360034
4.24353E−05


221
1.36926E−05
11.66574302
0.078870103
4.02562E−05


222
0.000575915
14.68630033
1.370605295
 7.6655E−05


223
0.000671987
12.21553255
2.027273789
 7.3438E−05


224
0.00481335
18.06809666
3.139875335
0.000230241


225
0.012382803
22.74638603
4.139161818
0.000357102


226
0.000433317
16.86212891
0.612226897
0.000113075


227
0.000137795
11.14069809
0.475239363
7.06695E−05


228
 9.3886E−05
10.63928408
0.475239363
4.97657E−05


229
0.000313999
8.258713592
2.494091632
4.15932E−05


230
0.000210483
7.532036315
1.088710484
6.96074E−05


231
0.000114812
11.93747308
0.545647796
 4.8006E−05


232
0.002931611
13.39406509
2.437319175
0.000245254


233
6.24704E−05
18.4889567
0.249409163
3.67897E−05


234
0.000224071
25.52186489
0.545647796
4.29359E−05


235
0.000140232
15.37844434
0.598290911
4.14082E−05


236
4.47327E−05
11.14069809
0.238183902
4.59548E−05


237
3.15174E−05
14.35199932
0.172548984
 3.4879E−05


238
0.00185966
24.94091632
2.998557666
6.71063E−05


239
0.000178064
9.929157627
1.250006885
3.92323E−05


240
0.000131112
28.6360034
0.243731918
 5.0291E−05


241
0.077185871
14.68630033
27.98416838
0.000509888


242
0.002460055
12.21553255
1.981127403
0.000276036


243
0.000266501
20.74495061
0.864793477
4.07598E−05


244
0.000595339
17.25489835
1.279123286
7.22179E−05


245
7.95906E−05
23.27621742
0.207449506
4.47518E−05


246
0.005975783
15.37844434
3.2878531
0.000318703


247
0.002012702
11.93747308
6.869298762
6.71892E−05


248
0.000702835
14.02530793
2.552186489
5.23388E−05


249
0.053096317
12.79123286
20.74495061
0.00054322


250
0.002184807
22.74638603
4.235575283
 6.0935E−05


251
0.000338308
11.93747308
1.573665433
4.86469E−05


252
0.000244172
11.14069809
0.719303884
8.35599E−05


253
0.017365732
23.27621742
3.213012427
0.000631947


254
0.000381754
13.08917895
1.039710441
7.64048E−05


255
0.000239664
16.1032081
0.545647796
7.52696E−05


256
0.000165229
13.70605295
0.533227336
 6.1892E−05


257
0.572826298
17.25489835
2.274638603
0.039630115


258
0.000443714
15.02838821
0.992915763
7.97373E−05


259
0.000717834
19.36031438
1.936031438
5.12357E−05


260
0.00035004
11.66574302
0.992915763
8.13609E−05


261
0.003980082
21.22816259
4.644215946
0.000109751


262
0.004494006
13.08917895
2.074495061
0.000452661


263
0.00032321
33.64437037
0.306840305
8.49517E−05


264
0.000597681
15.37844434
0.736058624
0.000141442


265
0.083606849
23.27621742
4.435191796
0.002199125


266
0.000248454
6.869298762
2.274638603
4.28948E−05


267
0.003448544
15.02838821
2.798416838
0.000221445


268
0.230806121
14.35199932
2.274638603
0.019197571


269
0.005793992
28.6360034
4.235575283
0.000132201


270
0.000141299
15.37844434
0.44351918
5.65689E−05


271
0.007550977
19.36031438
2.027273789
0.000522164


272
0.028153555
10.639284082
0.27273789
0.000349045


273
8.07637E−05
11.40019829
0.321301243
5.95633E−05


274
0.00237182
11.66574302
2.074495061
0.000260883


275
0.062347981
8.258713592
2.734717094
0.007492655


276
0.003912558
21.22816259
4.334234505
0.000116891


277
3.27487E−05
13.70605295
0.168621289
3.88351E−05


278
0.000180456
14.35199932
0.238183902
0.000140977


279
0.083163946
16.862128913
7.74960444
0.000355677


280
0.001253422
9.055499382
0.788701025
0.00046667


281
0.000194038
11.93747308
1.140019829
3.91682E−05


282
5.68186E−05
17.65681657
0.176568166
5.00244E−05


283
0.002179164
13.70605295
1.221553255
0.000361179


284
0.010480433
16.86212891
4.976367043
0.000339565


285
0.000207057
13.70605295
0.475239363
8.56867E−05


286
0.000128927
10.63928408
0.656012939
4.98499E−05


287
0.000302888
16.1032081
0.864793477
5.93561E−05


288
 4.6263E−05
10.39710441
0.202727379
5.86939E−05


289
0.001354597
13.70605295
3.52299807
7.58072E−05


290
0.000618642
8.647934772
2.672467333
7.19199E−05


291
0.001887329
18.06809666
1.936031438
0.000147404


292
0.0004937
17.25489835
0.753203631
0.000101778


293
0.001616446
29.3030216
3.068403046
 4.9181E−05


294
0.068465492
12.21553255
6.264874929
0.002429746


295
0.000451584
18.06809666
1.016043742
6.58369E−05


296
0.004368096
17.25489835
1.166574302
0.000589091


297
0.001490968
13.70605295
2.734717094
0.000106171


298
0.028951999
17.65681657
1.279123286
0.003477998


299
0.001152281
11.40019829
3.139875335
8.74717E−05


300
0.026971311
14.68630033
2.327621742
0.002190423


301
 9.6134E−05
16.1032081
0.404494299
4.04506E−05


302
0.000130133
15.02838821
0.464421595
5.08676E−05


303
0.005604023
10.63928408
3.364437037
0.000434532


304
0.000421245
14.02530793
2.027273789
4.08524E−05


305
0.001977786
21.22816259
5.583575658
4.52103E−05


306
0.002425573
18.06809666
5.846721472
6.16713E−05


307
0.000624884
15.73665433
1.250006885
8.71442E−05


308
0.000333609
6.869298762
2.327621742
5.60145E−05


309
0.000142043
11.66574302
0.598290911
5.41275E−05


310
0.000325791
12.21553255
1.84889567
3.96374E−05


311
0.000551644
15.73665433
0.992915763
9.51103E−05


312
0.000100483
16.86212891
0.404494299
 3.9605E−05


313
5.66848E−05
13.08917895
0.267246733
4.48192E−05


314
7.52759E−05
11.66574302
0.453850068
3.89212E−05


315
0.000315848
7.029305285
3.213012427
3.73045E−05


316
0.001489085
11.14069809
3.52299807
0.000101478


317
0.000160787
12.79123286
0.948227192
3.61294E−05


318
7.65189E−05
16.86212891
0.336443704
3.62734E−05


319
6.90281E−05
16.4783
0.255218649
4.45683E−05


320
4.75538E−05
8.647934772
0.404494299
3.71925E−05


321
0.000355948
16.86212891
1.308917895
4.29815E−05


322
0.000202312
10.39710441
1.502838821
3.53275E−05


323
0.227356053
12.79123286
36.05059237
0.001327589


324
9.01036E−05
14.02530793
0.395286885
4.48419E−05


325
0.000225325
15.73665433
0.612226897
6.36963E−05


326
0.004941774
20.74495061
2.998557666
0.000216414


327
0.01326492
12.21553255
2.027273789
0.00142922


328
0.003718088
23.81839017
3.689031854
0.000113968


329
0.004167344
15.37844434
0.884937105
0.000832679


330
0.000131618
11.14069809
0.558357566
5.63909E−05


331
4.56581E−05
9.482271919
0.255218649
5.12428E−05


332
7.20774E−05
12.50006885
0.352299807
4.45916E−05


333
0.034758616
10.63928408
2.734717094
0.003243739


334
0.001279068
16.1032081
1.339406509
0.000164095


335
0.0067709
15.37844434
10.16043742
0.000117995


336
0.000241151
9.266429059
1.806809666
3.87283E−05


337
0.000881043
11.93747308
2.027273789
9.85572E−05


338
0.001402766
22.74638603
2.222861507
7.59423E−05


339
0.000155937
17.25489835
0.584672147
4.12205E−05


340
0.000102855
26.72467333
0.286360034
3.63759E−05


341
0.029541969
16.4783
6.122268966
0.000795475


342
0.010547896
9.055499382
32.13012427
9.92001E−05


343
0.00104485
12.50006885
3.139875335
 7.3512E−05


344
0.003614546
8.84937105
2.274638603
0.000497764


345
0.001856153
15.73665433
2.86360034
0.000112033


346
0.000199744
8.451083744
1.61032081
3.99152E−05


347
3.08138E−05
8.647934772
0.255218649
3.76999E−05


348
0.000222023
9.703142406
1.250006885
5.02243E−05


349
8.82657E−05
11.66574302
0.453850068
4.50325E−05


350
2.57735E−05
10.88710484
0.172548984
3.69963E−05


351
4.03044E−05
13.39406509
0.19811274
4.13067E−05


352
0.004566689
9.482271919
3.605059237
0.000362474


353
0.001055758
13.08917895
5.210895997
4.20808E−05


354
3.05164E−05
10.88710484
0.2172263
3.53289E−05


355
0.002585554
27.34717094
2.998557666
8.70808E−05


356
0.000139406
12.21553255
0.702930528
4.36022E−05


357
0.003081322
22.22861507
2.327621742
0.000163677


358
0.000205076
14.68630033
0.558357566
6.72774E−05


359
0.000146209
33.64437037
0.32878531
3.61733E−05


360
0.012689615
12.21553255
25.52186489
0.000112607


361
0.004583891
16.4783
4.752393632
0.000158805


362
0.000214841
7.360586237
1.468630033
5.37078E−05


363
0.007450718
18.91961982
2.494091632
0.000428744


364
0.106193293
10.88710484
3.364437037
0.008050725


365
6.36614E−05
12.50006885
0.368903185
3.78588E−05


366
3.36424E−05
15.02838821
0.157366543
3.92244E−05


367
6.81265E−05
10.63928408
0.453850068
3.83103E−05


368
6.02667E−05
10.16043742
0.344280484
4.64704E−05


369
0.015366884
10.88710484
2.93030216
0.001306252


370
0.041789394
19.36031438
25.52186489
0.000230784


371
0.000222478
15.73665433
0.864793477
4.34986E−05


372
0.005150502
17.25489835
2.494091632
0.000326126


373
8.00509E−05
9.482271919
0.360505924
6.48627E−05


374
6.63686E−05
22.22861507
0.212281626
3.81911E−05


375
7.50907E−05
12.21553255
0.44351918
3.70893E−05


376
0.001539591
13.39406509
1.468630033
0.000212993


377
0.130153448
18.4889567
29.3030216
0.000651829


378
0.012114767
18.06809666
0.992915763
0.001833678


379
7.85619E−05
10.63928408
0.413916182
4.87707E−05


380
0.001795076
16.86212891
3.2878531
8.70516E−05


381
0.000130478
8.451083744
1.039710441
4.08208E−05


382
0.00011804
7.029305285
1.114069809
4.04629E−05


383
0.001199255
11.14069809
0.864793477
0.000337446


384
0.00076988
16.4783
1.537844434
8.24444E−05


385
0.000328129
11.66574302
1.402530793
5.43864E−05


386
0.001878249
23.27621742
1.806809666
0.000121176


387
0.000949237
22.74638603
0.948227192
0.000119569


388
0.000322352
11.93747308
0.686929876
0.000108257


389
9.70649E−05
10.88710484
0.686929876
3.58878E−05


390
5.56156E−05
21.22816259
0.184889567
3.84766E−05


391
0.000301138
14.02530793
0.825871359
7.01035E−05


392
0.00023197
19.36031438
0.464421595
6.96021E−05


393
0.086167577
13.08917895
42.35575283
0.000428099


394
0.00320585
20.74495061
4.752393632
 8.8303E−05


395
0.000356753
14.02530793
1.140019829
6.04461E−05


396
0.003535662
11.66574302
2.611634549
0.000315439


397
0.00014032
16.4783
0.386289057
5.92625E−05


398
0.004866363
12.50006885
14.68630033
7.28681E−05


399
0.000158366
23.81839017
0.273471709
6.59099E−05


400
0.001939939
8.647934772
3.2878531
0.000185328


401
0.074518819
16.1032081
1.936031438
0.006598619


402
0.000368539
16.4783
0.970314241
6.18047E−05


403
0.00019918
8.070722319
1.725489835
3.91329E−05


404
0.0023339
14.35199932
3.52299807
0.000125363


405
0.000307937
10.16043742
2.074495061
3.99055E−05


406
4.35479E−05
8.070722319
0.344280484
4.25484E−05


407
0.009636643
10.63928408
15.37844434
0.000162331


408
0.000704922
12.79123286
1.64783
9.09555E−05


409
0.082073394
13.39406509
3.139875335
0.005307281


410
0.000172874
11.14069809
0.612226897
6.78625E−05


411
0.002590415
20.74495061
5.713633843
5.95983E−05


412
2.14123E−05
10.16043742
0.114001983
5.01741E−05


413
1.79079E−05
12.50006885
0.103971044
3.74308E−05


414
0.015229974
16.4783
7.532036315
0.000340591


415
0.001564252
5.456477959
2.93030216
0.000265267


416
7.42737E−05
24.94091632
0.232762174
3.46397E−05


417
0.002017239
12.50006885
2.437319175
0.000179922


418
0.001073996
14.02530793
3.2878531
6.32416E−05


419
0.000103914
24.37319175
0.321301243
3.60307E−05


420
0.00227239
15.02838821
5.210895997
7.79872E−05


421
0.003094582
17.65681657
5.846721472
8.01705E−05


422
0.026822594
11.14069809
24.37319175
0.000263402


423
8.06153E−05
17.25489835
0.321301243
3.90039E−05


424
6.65435E−05
15.02838821
0.313987533
3.80554E−05


425
8.68244E−05
12.50006885
0.413916182
4.61813E−05


426
5.02296E−05
9.482271919
0.377496044
 3.7914E−05


427
0.005633169
13.39406509
15.73665433
7.26803E−05


428
0.053561311
10.88710484
2.611634549
0.005001157


429
0.000211193
7.360586237
1.981127403
3.98133E−05


430
0.128441705
12.50006885
15.02838821
0.001895798


431
0.00032307
9.482271919
1.537844434
6.04888E−05


432
0.010134136
23.81839017
16.4783
6.92222E−05


433
7.69896E−05
13.70605295
0.377496044
4.06321E−05


434
0.000135597
22.22861507
0.377496044
4.37181E−05


435
0.001444653
14.68630033
4.644215946
5.67292E−05


436
8.44475E−05
14.02530793
0.336443704
4.85387E−05


437
0.000172682
15.02838821
0.788701025
4.02947E−05


438
0.043302564
22.22861507
4.334234505
0.001237471


439
0.00083712
19.81127403
1.140019829
0.000100867


440
0.110359565
17.25489835
23.81839017
0.000713841


441
0.00239921
15.02838821
3.139875335
0.000138022


442
5.51714E−05
11.40019829
0.299855767
4.43098E−05


443
2.73416E−05
13.70605295
0.119374731
4.57706E−05


444
7.76194E−05
13.39406509
0.32878531
4.81237E−05


445
0.01841864
18.06809666
8.451083744
0.000326235


446
0.00091319
13.70605295
1.435199932
0.00012658


447
0.005087454
18.06809666
4.538500684
0.000169647


448
0.001545552
16.86212891
0.970314241
0.000258749


449
0.000120989
10.39710441
0.584672147
 5.2939E−05


450
0.000949163
15.73665433
2.222861507
7.37358E−05


451
0.003519884
15.37844434
6.869298762
9.09167E−05


452
2.91528E−05
10.63928408
0.184889567
3.93474E−05


453
0.000259943
12.50006885
0.497636704
0.000114874


454
0.069613956
9.929157627
4.044942993
0.004814647


455
0.011539164
13.39406509
8.84937105
0.000266971


456
0.000245616
15.37844434
0.992915763
4.32175E−05


457
0.064510667
18.91961982
27.98416838
0.000328666


458
0.019758322
16.1032081
38.62890569
8.50784E−05


459
0.000992578
10.39710441
0.926642906
0.000279497


460
0.000162264
13.70605295
0.377496044
8.49288E−05


461
8.60808E−05
14.68630033
0.395286885
3.95986E−05


462
0.000100838
10.16043742
0.5210896
 5.101E−05


463
0.026273224
22.74638603
6.712934432
0.000467224


464
0.003758225
13.70605295
3.52299807
0.000209698


465
0.000251714
14.02530793
0.948227192
5.16242E−05


466
0.210714099
20.74495061
15.37844434
0.001793468


467
0.015124482
16.86212891
18.4889567
0.000130494


468
0.001275927
18.91961982
2.381839017
 7.7579E−05


469
0.005514392
20.74495061
2.494091632
0.000288274


470
0.156586151
18.4889567
6.410802613
0.003538119


471
0.186229111
14.35199932
2.998557666
0.011991882


472
0.042285785
28.6360034
5.210895997
0.000773999


473
0.650258534
12.21553255
44.35191796
0.003257705


474
0.144329762
25.52186489
5.210895997
0.002904785


475
0.002158857
16.4783
0.184889567
0.001965935


476
0.006971615
20.27273789
2.86360034
0.000330172


477
0.00402333
9.929157627
3.774960444
0.00029246


478
0.033812192
17.25489835
5.98290911
0.000880456


479
0.00023843
15.02838821
0.249409163
0.000173268


480
0.001645208
19.36031438
1.308917895
0.000179905


481
0.0484191
11.93747308
7.532036315
0.001430588


482
9.55314E−05
18.4889567
0.184889567
7.59792E−05


483
0.041845605
11.93747308
9.703142406
0.000984742


484
0.019450519
19.81127403
5.456477959
0.000480395


485
0.026711018
8.647934772
2.798416838
0.002995786


486
0.002357911
18.4889567
2.437319175
0.000142909


487
0.421294865
33.64437037
25.52186489
0.001344337


488
0.025919091
16.1032081
30.68403046
0.000141309


489
0.00481277
27.34717094
0.433423451
0.001102531


490
0.005726208
9.266429059
5.98290911
0.000280416


491
0.016151725
15.37844434
3.862890569
0.000738517


492
0.000487614
7.360586237
3.442804843
5.22113E−05


493
0.061733956
29.3030216
6.410802613
0.000885952


494
0.001663264
19.81127403
1.502838821
0.000152943


495
0.066165089
11.40019829
19.81127403
0.000798045


496
0.014395555
15.37844434
14.68630033
0.000170788


497
0.009138115
16.4783
2.381839017
0.000638927


498
0.105623599
15.02838821
7.029305285
0.002777924


499
0.000110394
28.6360034
0.279841684
 3.7797E−05


500
0.044368613
9.703142406
24.37319175
0.000512563


501
0.092445553
13.39406509
27.34717094
0.000694007


502
0.24858678
10.39710441
4.235575283
0.015327737


503
0.000134276
11.40019829
0.509228152
6.18108E−05


504
0.003680974
26.11634549
3.862890569
9.72953E−05
















TABLE 2







Genes expressed predominately in the Retinal Ganglion Cell


Layer (RGL). Genes expressed at least at 10 fold higher


levels in the GCL than in other parts of the retina, as


identified both by SAM and t-test, and grouped by putative function.


Promoter sequences belonging to any of these genes would in


drive high and preferential gene expression in GCL


and may hence be utilised to drive expression of OphNDI1


contemplated in this patent application. In addition, additional


genes expresses in addition to OphNDI1 such as those


described in Table 6 may be expressed from any of these promoters.


Table adapted from Kim et al., Mol Vis 2006; 12:1640-1646








Transcriptional regulation and RNA



binding molecules
ECM organisation





EBF
CTHRC1


ERF5A2
LAMA4


ELAVL2
SERPINE2


ELAVL4
Neuronal development


FKBP1B
CRTAC1


KIAA1045
GAP43


POU4F1
NRG1


RBPMS
NRN1


RBPMS2
Fatty acid metabolism


TGFB1I1
FABP3


Cytoskeleton/Neurofilaments
LSS


EPPK1
Signal transduction


KEF5A
GPR54


MAP1A
RGS1


MICAL2
RGS5


NEF3
RIT2


NEFH
Apoptosis


NEFL
IER3


PRPH
LGALS1


TMSB10
TNFRSF21


Endocytosis/neurotransmitter
Miscellaneous


transport/synaptic transmission



ANXA2
GGH


AP1G1
HBA2


CHRNB3
HHL


CPLX1
HLA-DPA1


GNAS
LMO2


QPRT
MT3


RAB13
PECAM1


STMN2
PPP2R2C


STXBP6
UCHL1


SYNGR3
Cell adhesion


Ion/Anion transport
FAT3


ATP1B1
FN1


KCNA2
GJA1


KCNJ8
PCDH7


SCN1A
SRPX


SCN1B
THY1


SCN4B



SLC17A6



SLC4A11



GABRB3
















TABLE 3





Transcripts detected at very high levels by gene array analyses


of the human retinal ganglion cell layer (GCL). The genes listed


here are likely to represent highly abundant


transcripts of the ganglion cell layer. Promoter


sequences belonging to any of these genes


would in theory drive very high levels of gene


expression in GCL and may hence be utilised


to drive expression of OphNDI1 and the


contemplated in this patent application. In addition,


additional genes expresses in addition to


OphNDI1 such as those described in Table 6 may be


expressed from any of these promoters.


Table adapted from Kim et al., Mol Vis 2006;12:1640-1646


















TF
H3F3A



TUBA3
COX7A2



NEFH
RTN1



GABARAPL3
CALM2



TUBB
MAFF



GLUL
INA



UBB
PGK1



NEFL
AF1Q



EIF3S6IP
YWHAB



PGAM1
SUI1



LDHA
DDAH1



RTN4
EIF4A2



HINT1
MAP1B



LDHB
NDUFB8



PGR1
K-ALPHA-1



EEF1A1
STK35



PTPRO
NEF3



SNAP25
TMSB10



FTH1
DRLM



EEF1D
MGC14697



SKP1A
FTL



BEX1
CSRP2



HSPA8
SRP14



PCP4
CYCS



PARK7
BNIP3



MAP4
LAMP1



ACTG1
WIF1



CDIPT
MDH1



VAMP1
NARS



SMT3H2
OAZ1



EEF1G
STOM



COX5A
GNAS



SPARCL1
NGFRAP1



UBC
DBI



KARS
TSC22



C6orf53
ATP6V0E



VEGF
FDFT1



COX4I1
SAT



STMN2
ATP5A1



NPM1
MTCH1



APP
HIG1



CIRBP
GPX3



B2M
CFL1



DP1
MYL6



LAPTM4B
SNCG

















TABLE 4





Exemplary universal promoters, inducible/conditional promoters,


enhancer elements and epigenetic elements


















Promoters
Reference







chicken β-actin promoter
Miyazaki et al., Gene. 1989




July 15; 79(2):269-77.



SV40 promoter
Byrne et al., Proc Natl Acad




Sci USA. 1983




February; 80(3):721-5.



CMV promoter
Thomsen et al., Proc Natl




Acad Sci USA. 1984




February; 81(3):659-63.




Schmidt et al., Mol Cell. Biol.




August 1990 vol.10 no.8




4406-4411.




Furth et al., Nucl Acids Res.




(1991) 19(22):6205-6208.



Ubiquitin promoter
Schorpp et al., Nucl. Acids




Res. (1996) 24 (9):1787-




1788.



PGK promoter
McBurney et al., Dev Dyn.




August 1994; 200(4):278-93.







Inducible Promoters
Reference







tetR
Steiger et al., 2007







Enhancer Element
Reference







Chicken ovalbumin upstream
Eguchi et al., Biochimie



promoter transcription factor II
89(3):278-88, 2007



Mouse dystrophin muscle
Anderson et al., Mol. Ther.



promoter/enhancer
14(5):724-34, 2006



Tobacco eIF4A-10
Tian et al., J. Plant Physiol.



promoter elements
162(12):1355-66, 2005



Immunoglobulin (Ig)
Frezza et al., Ann. Rheum.



enhancer element HS1, 2A
Dis. Mar. 28, 2007



Col9a1 enhancer element
Genzer and Bridgewater




Nucleic Acids Res.




35(4):1178-86, 2007



Gata2 intronic enhancer
Khandekar et al.,




Development Mar. 29, 2007



TH promoter enhancer
Gao et al., Brain Res.




1130(1):1-16, 2007



CMV enhancer
InvivoGen cat# pdrive-cag




05A13-SV



Woodchuck hepatitis virus
Donello et al., J. Virol.



posttranscriptional
72(6):5085-92, 1998



regulatory element




Woodchuck hepatitis virus
Schambach et al., Gene Ther.



posttranscriptional
13(7):641-5, 2006



regulatory element




IRBP
Ying et al., Curr. Eye Res.




17(8):777-82, 1998



CMV enhancer and
InvivoGen cat# pdrive-cag



chicken β-actin promoter
05A13-SV



CMV enhancer and chicken
InvivoGen cat# pdrive-cag



β-actin promoter and 5'UTR
05A13-SV



CpG-island
Antoniou et al., Genomics




82:269-279, 2003







Epigenetic elements
Reference







Mcp Insulators
Kyrchanova et al., Mol. Cell Biol.




27(8):3035-43, 2007



CpG-island region of
Williams et al., BMC Biotechnol.



the HNRPA2B1 locus
5:17, 2005



Chicken b-globin
Kwaks and Otte 2006 Trends in



5'hypersensitive site 4 (cHS4)
Biotechnology 24:137-142



Ubiquitous chromatin
Kwaks and Otte 2006 Trends in



opening elements (UCOEs)
Biotechnology 24:137-142



Matrix associated
Kwaks and Otte 2006 Trends in



regions (MARs)
Biotechnology 24:137-142



Stabilising and antirepressor
Kwaks and Otte 2006 Trends in



elements (STAR)
Biotechnology 24:137-142



Human growth
Trujillo MA et al. 2006 Mol



hormone gene silencer
Endocrinol 20:2559

















TABLE 5





Exemplary Vectors







Viral Vectors









Delivery Method
Serotype
Reference





AAV (ssAAV
All serotypes,
Lebkowski et al., Mol. Cell


or scAAV)
including
Biol. 8(10):3988-96, 1988



but not limited to
Flannery et al., Proc. Natl.



1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,
Acad. Sci. U.S.A.



8, 9, 10, 11, 12,
94(13):6916-21, 1997


Lentivirus (for example
VSV-G
Pang et al., Mol. Vis. 12:


but not exclusively
Rabies-G
756-67, 2006


Feline-FIV,
Further
Takahashi Methods Mol.


Equine-EIAV,
serotypes**
Biol. 246:439-49, 2004


Bovine-BIV

Balaggan et al., J. Gene


and Simian-SIV).

Med. 8(3):275-85, 2006


Adenovirus

Bennett et al., Nat. Med.




2(6):649-54, 1996


Simian papovirius

Kimchi-Sarfaty et al., Hum.


SV40

Gene Ther. 13(2):299-310,




2002


Semliki Forest Virus

DiCiommo et al., Invest.




Ophthalmol. Vis. Sco.




45(9):3320-9, 2004


Sendai Virus

Ikeda et al., Exp. Eye Res.




75(1):39-48, 2002










The list provided is not exhaustive; other viral vectors and derivatives,


natural or synthesized could be used in the invention.


Non Viral Vectors or Delivery Methods








Delivery Method
Reference





Cationic liposomes
Sakurai et al., Gene Ther. 8(9):677-86, 2001


HVJ liposomes
Hangai et al., Arch. Ophthalmol. 116(3):342-8,



1998


Polyethylenimine
Liao and Yau Biotechniques 42(3):285-6, 2007


DNA nanoparticles
Farjo et al., PloS ONE 1:e38, 2006


Dendrimers
Marano et al., Gene Ther. 12(21):1544-50,



2005


Bacterial
Brown and Giaccia Cancer Res. 58(7):1408-16,



1998


Macrophages
Griffiths et al., Gene Ther. 7(3):255-62, 2000


Stem cells
Hall et al., Exp. Hematol. 34(4):433-42, 2006


Retinal transplant
Ng et al., Chem. Immunol. Allergy 92:300-16,



2007


Marrow/Mesenchymal
Kicic et al., J. Neurosci. 23(21):7742-9, 2003


stromal cells
Chng et al., J. Gene Med. 9(1):22-32, 2007


Implant (e.g.,
Montezuma et al., Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.


Poly(imide)uncoated
47(8):3514-22, 2006


or coated)



Electroporation
Featherstone A. Biotechnol. Lab. 11(8):16,



1993


Targeting peptides
Trompeter et al., J. Immunol Methods. 274(1-


(for example but
2):245-56, 2003


not exclusively Tat)



Lipid mediated
Nagahara et al., Nat. Med. 4(12):1449-52, 1998


(e.g., DOPE, PEG)
Zeng et al., J. Virol. 81(5):2401-17, 2007



Caplen et al., Gene Ther. 2(9):603-13,



1995Manconi et al., Int. J. Pharm. 234(1-



2):237-48, 2006



Amrite et al., Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.



47(3):1149-60, 2006



Chalberg et al., Invest. Ophthalmol. Vis. Sci.










46(6):2140-6, 2005

















TABLE 6







Exemplary neurotrophic factors, anti-apoptotic agents and antioxidants.


Neurotrophic factor genes, anti-apoptotic agents or antioxidants


which may be used in conjunction with the optimised NdiI therapy


contemplated in this patent application. These genes may be delivered


at the same time as the NdiI therapy or at a different time, using the


same vector as the NdiI therapy or a different one. Neurotrophic factor,


anti-apoptotic agents or antioxidants genes may be expressed from


ubiquitously expressed promoters such as CMV and Ubiquitin (Table 4)


or from one of the promoters described in Tables 2 and 3.








Neurotrophic factor
Reference





NGF
Carmignoto et al., 1989


b-NGF
Lipps 2002


NT-3
Lu et al., 2011


NT4
Krishnamoorthy et al., 2001


BDNF
Krishnamoorthy et al., 2001; DiPolo et al.,



1998; Garcia and Sharma 1998; Carmignoto



et al., 1989


GDNF
Wu et al., 2004, Frasson et al., 1999,



Gregory-Evans et al., 2009


NTN (Neurturin)
Koeberle et al 2002


aFGF and bFGF
Faktorovich et al. 1900; LaVail et al.,



1991, 1992 Perry et al., 1995; McLaren and



Inana 1997; Akimoto et al., 1999; Uteza et



al., 1999; Lau et al., 2000


LIF
Joly et al., 2008, Rhee and Yang, 2010


CNTF
Sieving et al., 2006, Thanos et al., 2009, Li et



al., 2011


Hepatocyte growth factor
Tönges et al., 2011


PDGF
Akiyaman et al., 2006


VEGF
Trujillo et al., 2007


PEDF
Cayouette et al., 1999


RdCVF
Leveillard et al., 2004


Chondroitinase ABC
Liu 2011


Erythropoietin
Rex et al., 2009, Rong et al., 2011, Gong et al



2011, Hu et al., 2011, Sullivan et al., 2011


Suberythropoietc Epo
Wang et al., 2011





Anti-apoptotic agents
Reference





Calpain inhibitor I
McKenan et al., 2007


Calpain inhibitor II
McKenan et al., 2007


Calpeptin
McKenan et al., 2007


PARP



Norgestrel
Doonan et al., 2011





Antioxidant
Reference





Vitamin C
www.nei.nih.gov/amd


Vitamin E
www.nei.nih.gov/amd


Beta-carotene
www.nei.nih.gov/amd


SOD2 +/− catalase
Jung et al., 2007, Usui et al., 2009, Doonan



al., 2009


Rosiglitazone
Doonan et al., 2009


Sestrin-1
Budanov et al., 2002, 2004


PPAR
Aoun et al., 2003, Zhao et al., 2006



Tomita et al., 2005, Komeina et al., 2006, 2007


Lutein
Li et al., 2010
















TABLE 7





Disease phenotypes and genotypes associated with mitochondrial disease.


Clinical Phenotypes (non-LHON) Associated with mtDNA Polypeptide Gene Mutations


(http://www.mitomap.org/bin/view.pl/MITOMAP/ClinicalPhenotypesPolypeptide)
























Nucleotide



Syndromes
Locus
Disease*
Allele
Change
AA Change





Dystonia
MTND
Adult-Onset Dystonia
A3796G
A-G
T164A



1






Dystonia, Leigh
MTND
LS/Dystonia
T14487C
T-C
M63V


Syndrome
6






Dystonia, Leigh
MTND
LDYT/LS
G14459A
G-A
A72V


Syndrome
6






Leigh Syndrome
MTND
LS
T10158C
T-C
S34P



3






Leigh Syndrome
MTND
LS-like/ESOC
T10191C
T-C
S45P



3






Leigh Syndrome
MTND
LS
C11777A
C-A
R340S



4






Leigh Syndrome
MTND
LS
T12706C
T-C
F124L



5






Leigh syndrome
MTATP
LS/FBSN
T9176C
T-C
L217P



6






Leigh Syndrome
MTATP
LS
T9176G
T-G
L217R



6






Leigh Syndrome
MTATP
LS
T9185C
T-C
L220P



6






Leigh Syndrome
MTATP
LS
T9191C
T C
L222P



6






Leigh Syndrome
MTATP
LS/NARP
T8993C
T-C
L156P



6






Neurogenic
MTATP
NARP
T8993G
T-G
L156R


Muscle Weakness
6






Ataxia and







Retinitis







Pigmentosa







Leigh Syndrome
MTCO3
LS-like
C9537ins
C-CC
Q111frameshift





C




Encephalomyopathy,
MTND
MELAS
T3308C
T C
M1T


MELAS
1






Encephalomyopathy,
MTND
MELAS/LHON
G3376A
G-A
E24K


MELAS
1






Encephalomyopathy,
MTND
MELAS
G3697A
G-A
G131S


MELAS
1






Encephalomyopathy,
MTND
MELAS
G3946A
G-A
E214K


MELAS
1






Encephalomyopathy,
MTND
MELAS
T3949C
T-C
Y215H


MELAS
1






Encephalomyopathy,
MTND
MELAS
A11084G
A-G
T109A


MELAS
4






Encephalomyopathy,
MTND
MELAS
A12770G
A-G
E145G


MELAS
5






Encephalomyopathy,
MTND
MELAS/LHON/LS
A13045C
A-C
M237L


MELAS
5
overlap syndrome





Encephalomyopathy,
MTND
MELAS/LS
A13084T
A-T
S250C


MELAS
5






Encephalomyopathy,
MTND
MELAS/LS
G13513A
G-A
D393N


MELAS
5






Encephalomyopathy,
MTND
MELAS
A13514G
A-G
D393G


MELAS
5






Encephalomyopathy,
MTND
MELAS
G14453A
G-A
A74V


MELAS
6






Encephalomyopathy,
MTCY
MELAS/PD
14787del
TTAA-
I14frameshift


MELAS
B

4
del



Epilepsy
MTCO1
Therapy-resistant
C6489A
C-A
L196I




Epilepsy





Encephalomyopathy,
MTCO1
Multisystem Disorder
G6930A
G-A
G343Ter


Multisystem







Disorder







Encephalomyopathy,
MTCOI
Myopathy and Cortical
6015del5
Del 5 bp
Frameshift, 42


Multisystem

Lesions


peptide


Disorder







Encephalomyopathy
MTCO2
Encephalomyopathy
T7587C
T-C
M1T


Encephalomyopathy,
MTCO2
Multisystem Disorder
G7896A
G-A
W104Ter


Multisystem







Disorder







Encephalomyopathy,
MTCO2
Lactic Acidosis
8042del2
AT-del
M153Ter


Lactic







Acidosis







Encephalomyopathy
MTCO3
Encephalomyopathy
G9952A
G-A
W248Ter


Encephalomyopathy,
MTCO3
MELAS/PEM/NAION
T9957C
T-C
F251L


MELAS







Encephalomyopathy,
MTATP
Lactic Acidosis/
9205del2
TA-del
Ter227M


Lactic
6
Seizures





Acidosis







Encephalomyopathy,
MTCY
Multisystem Disorder
A15579G
A-G
Y278C


Lactic
B






Acidosis







Encephalomyopathy,
MTCY
Septo-Optic Dysplasia
T14849C
T-C
S35P


Septo-Optic
B






Dysplasia







MM, Exercise
MTCY
EXIT
G14846A
G-A
G34S


Intolerance
B






Mitochondrial
MTCY
MM
G15059A
G-A
G190Ter


Myopathy
B






MM, Exercise
MTCY
EXIT
G15084A
G-A
W113Ter


Intolerance
B






MM, Exercise
MTCY
EXIT
G15150A
G-A
W135Ter


Intolerance
B






MM, Exercise
MTCY
EXIT
G15168A
G-A
W141Ter


Intolerance
B






MM, Exercise
MTCY
EXIT
T15197C
T-C
S151P


Intolerance
B






MM, Exercise
MTCY
EXIT/
G15242A
G-A
G166Ter


Intolerance
B
Encephalomyopathy





MM, Exercise
MTCY
EXIT
G15497A
G-A
G251S


Intolerance
B






MM, Exercise
MTCY
EXIT
15498del24
24 bp
251GDPDNYT


Intolerance
B


deletion-
L-del258


MM, Exercise
MTCY
EXIT
G15615A
G-A
G290D


Intolerance
B






MM, Exercise
MTCY
EXIT
G15723A
G-A
W326Ter


Intolerance
B






Mitochondrial
MTCY
MM
G15762A
G-A
G339E


Myopathy
B






MM, CPEO
MTND
CPEO
T11232C
T-C
L140P



4






MM, Exercise
MTND
EXIT
G11832A
G-A
W358Ter


Intolerance
4






MM, Exercise
MTCO1
EXIT/Myoglobinuria
G5920A
G-A
W6Ter


Intolerance







Mitochondrial
MTCO1
MM &
G6708A
G-A
G269Ter


Myopathy

Rhabdomyolysis





Mitochondrial
MTCO2
MM
T7671A
T-A
M29K


Myopathy







MM, Exercise
MTCO2
EXIT/Rhabdomyolysis
T7989C
T-C
L135P


Intolerance







Mitochondrial
MTCO3
Myopathy and
9487del15
Del 15 bp
Removed 5 aa


Myopathy

Myoglobinuria





Hypertrophic
MTCY
HCM
G15243A
G-A
G166E


Cardiomyopathy
B






Hypertrophic
MTCY
HCM
G15498A
G-A
G251D


Cardiomyopathy
B






Deafness
MTCO1
DEAF
A7443G
A-G
Ter514G


Deafness
MTCO1
DEAF
1A7445C
A-C
Ter514S


Deafness-Sensory
MTCO1
SNHL/LHON
G7444A
G-A
Ter514K


Neural Hearing







Loss







Deafness-Sensory
MTCO1
SNHL
A7445G
A-G
Ter514Ter


Neural Hearing







Loss







Deafness-Sensory
MTCO2
SNHL
A8108G
A-G
I175V


Neural Hearing







Loss







Deafness-Sensory
MTND
SNHL
C14340T
C-T
V112M


Neural Hearing
6






Loss







Diabetes Mellitus
MTND
NIDDM/PEO
G3316A
G-A
A4T



1






Diabetes Mellitus
MTND
DM
A12026G
A-G
I423V



4






Alzheimer &
MTND
ADPD
A3397G
A-G
M31V


Parkinson Disease
1






Alzheimer &
MTND
AD
G5460A
G-A
A331T


Parkinson Disease
2






Alzheimer &
MTND
AD
G5460T
G-T
A331S


Parkinson Disease
2






Idiopathic
MTCO1
SIDA
T6721C
T-C
M273T


Sideroblastic







Anemia







Idiopathic
MTCO1
SIDA
T6742C
T-C
I280T


Sideroblastic







Anemia










Abbreviations


♦Plasmy: Ho, homoplasmy; He, heteroplasmy


*Disease: AD, Alzheimer's Disease; ADPD, Alzheimer's Disease and Parkinsons's Disease; CPEO, Chronic Progressive External


Ophthalmoplegia; EXIT, exercise intolerance; LHON Leber Hereditary Optic Neuropathy; LS, Leigh Syndrome; MELAS,


Mitochondrial Encephalomyopathy, Lactic Acidosis, and Stroke-like episodes; MM, mitochondrial myopathy; NAION Nonarteritic


Anterior Ischemic Optic Neuropathy; NARP, Neurogenic muscle weakness, Ataxia, and Retinitis Pigmentosa; NIDDM, Non-Insulin


Dependent Diabetes Mellitus; SIDA, sideroblastic anemia; SNHL, Sensorineural Hearing Loss.


** Status: Cfrm, considered confirmed by multiple reports in the literature; Prov, provisional isolated report(s), not yet confirmed by


multiple labs; P.M., reported originally in the literature at pathogenic but now generally considered to be a polymorphic variant.


Clinical Phenotypes (non-LHON) Associated with mtDNA rRNA & tRNA Mutations (http://www.mitomap.org/bin/view.pl/


MITOMAP/ClinicalPhenotypesRNA)













Syndromes
Locus
Disease*
Allele
RNA






Encephalomyopathy,
MTTV
LS
C1624T
tRNA Val



Leigh Syndrome







Encephalomyopathy,
MTTV
Adult LS
G1644T
tRNA Val



Leigh Syndrome







Encephalomyopathy
MTTW
MILS
A5537insT
tRNA Trp



Leigh Syndrome







Encephalomyopathy
MTTK
MERRF
A8344G
ItRNA Lys



MERRF







Encephalomyopathy
MTTK
MERRF
T8356C
tRNA Lys



MERRF







Encephalomyopathy
MTTK
MERRF
G8361A
tRNA Lys



MERRF







Encephalomyopathy
MTTK
MERRF/MICM+
G8363A
tRNA Lys



MERRF

DEAF/Autism





Encephalomyopathy
MTTL1
MERRF/KSS overlap
G3255A
tRNA Leu



MERRF



( UUR)



Encephalomyopathy
MTTF
MERRF
G611A
tRNA Phe



MERRF







Encephalomyopathy
MTTD
MEPR
A7543G
tRNA



Myoclonus and



Asp



Psychomotor







Regression







Encephalomyopathy
MTTV
AMDF
G1606A
tRNA Val



Ataxia, Myoclonus







and Deafness







Encephalomyopathy
MTTH
MERRF-MELAS/
G12147A
tRNA His



MERRF

Cerebral edema





Encephalomyopathy
MTTL1
MELAS
A3243G
tRNA Leu



MELAS



(UUR)



Encephalomyopathy
MTTL1
MELAS
G3244A
tRNA Leu



MELAS



(UUR)



Encephalomyopathy
MTTL1
MELAS
A3252G
tRNA Leu



MELAS



(UUR)



Encephalomyopathy
MTTL1
MELAS
C3256T
tRNA Leu



MELAS



(UUR)



Encephalomyopathy
MTTL1
MELAS/Myopathy
T3258C
tRNA Leu



MELAS



(UUR)



Encephalomyopathy
MTTL1
MELAS
T3271C
tRNA Leu



MELAS



(UUR)



Encephalomyopathy
MTTL1
MELAS
T3291C
tRNA Leu



MELAS



(UUR)



Encephalomyopathy
MTTV
MELAS
G1642A
tRNA Val



MELAS







Encephalomyopathy
MTTQ
MELAS/
G4332A
tRNA Gln



MELAS

Encephalopathy





Encephalomyopathy
MTTF
MELAS
G583A
tRNA Phe



MELAS







Encephalomyopathy
MTRNR
MELAS
C3093G
16S



MELAS
2


rRNA



Encephalomyopathy
MTTL1
PEM
T3271delT
tRNA Leu







(UUR)



Encephalomyopathy
MTTI
Progressive
T4290C
tRNA Ile





Encephalopathy





Encephalomyopathy
MTTI
(Mitochondria
C4320T
tRNA Ile





Encephalo-







cardiomyopathy





Encephalomyopathy
MTTW
Encephalomyopathy
G5540A
tRNA Trp



Encephalomyopathy
MTTC
Encephalopathy
T5814C
tRNA Cys



Encephalomyopathy
MTTS1
PEM/AMDF
C7472insC
tRNA Ser







(UCN)



Encephalomyopathy
MTTS1
PEM/MERME
T7512C
tRNA Ser







(UCN)



Encephalomyopathy
MTTK
Encephalopathy
C8302T
tRNA Lys



Encephalomyopathy
MTTK
Mitochondrial
G8328A
tRNA Lys





Encephalopathy





Encephalomyopathy
MTTG
PEM
T10010C
tRNA Gly



Encephalomyopathy
MTATT
Encephalomyopathy
G15915A
tRNA Thr



Encepehaolmyopathy
MTRNR
Rett Syndrome
C2835T
rRNA



Rett Syndrome
2


16S



Multisystem Disease
MTTI
Varied familial
G4284A
tRNA Ile





presentation





Encephalomyopathy
MTTG
GER/SIDS
A10044G
tRNA Gly



Gastrointestinal







Reflux and Sudden







Infant Death







Syndrome







Mitochondrial
MTTF
MM
T582C
tRNA Phe



Myopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTF
MM
T618C
tRNA Phe



Myopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTL1
MM
G3242A
tRNA Leu



Myopathy



(UUR)



Mitochondrial
MTTL1
MM/CPEO
A3243G
TRNA



Myopathy



Leu(UUR)



Mitochondrial
MTTL1
MM
A3243T
tRNA



Myopathy



Leu(UUR)



Mitochondrial
MTTL1
MM/CPEO
T3250C
tRNA Leu



Myopathy



(UUR)



Mitochondrial
MTTL1
MM
A3251G
tRNA Leu



Myopathy



(UUR)



Mitochondrial
MTTL1
MM
C3254G
tRNA Leu



Myopathy



(UUR)



Mitochondrial
MTTL1
Myopathy
A3280G
tRNA Leu



Myopathy



(UUR)



Mitochondrial
MTTL1
Myopathy
A3288G
TRNA



Myopathy



Leu(UUR)



Mitochondrial
MTTL1
MM
A3302G
tRNA Leu



Myopathy



(UUR)



Mitochondrial
MTTI
MM
A4267G
tRNA Ile



Myopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTQ
Myopathy
T4370AT
tRNA Gln



Myopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTM
MM
T4409C
tRNA



Myopathy



Met



Mitochondrial
MTTM
MM
G4450A
tRNA



Myopathy



Met



Mitochondrial
MTTW
MM
G5521A
tRNA Trp



Myopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTS1
MM
T7480G
tRNA Ser



Myopathy



(UCN)



Mitochondrial
MTTS1
MM
G7497A
tRNA Ser



Myopathy



(UCN)



Mitochondrial
MTTK
Myopathy
T8355C
tRNA Lys



Myopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTK
Myopathy
T8362G
tRNA Lys



Myopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTG
Myopathy
G10014A
tRNA Gly



Myopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTL2
MM
A12320G
tRNA Leu



Myopathy



(CUN)



Mitochondrial
MTTE
MM + DM
T14709C
tRNA Glu



Myopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTT
MM
T15940delT
tRNA Thr



Myopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTP
MM
C15990T
tRNA Pro



Myopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTY
Exercise Intolerance
T5874G
tRNA Tyr



Myopathy, Exercise







Intolerance







Mitochondrial
MTTL1
CPEO
C3254T
tRNA Leu



Myopathy, CPEO



(UUR)



Mitochondrial
MTTI
CPEO
T4274C
tRNA Ile



Myopathy, CPEO







Mitochondrial
MTTI
CPEO
T4285C
tRNA Ile



Myopathy, CPEO







Mitochondrial
MTTI
CPEO/MS
G4298A
tRNA Ile



Myopathy, CPEO







Mitochondrial
MTTI
CPEO
G4309A
tRNA Ile



Myopathy, CPEO







Mitochondrial
MTTA
CPEO
T5628C
tRNA Ala



Myopathy, CPEO



Asn



Mitochondrial
MTTN
CPEO/MM
T5692C
tRNA



Myopathy, CPEO



Asn



Mitochondrial
MTTN
CPEO/MM
G5698A
tRNA



Myopathy, CPEO



Asn



Mitochondrial
MTTN
CPEO/MM
G5703G
tRNA



Myopathy, CPEO



Asn



Mitochondrial
MTTK
CPEO + Myoclonus
G8342A
tRNA Lys



Myopathy, CPEO







Mitochondrial
MTTL2
CPEO
G12294A
tRNA Leu



Myopathy, CPEO



(CUN)



Mitochondrial
MTTL2
CPEO/Stroke/CM
A12308G
tRNA Leu



Myopathy, CPEO



(CUN)



Mitochondrial
MTTL2
CPEO
T12311C
tRNA Leu



Myopathy, CPEO



(CUN)



Mitochondrial
MTTL2
CPEO
G12315A
tRNA Leu



Myopathy, CPEO



(CUN)



Mitochondrial
MTTL1
Ocular myopathy
T3273C
tRNA Leu



Myopathy, Ocular



(UUR)



Myopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTL1
KSS
G3249A
tRNA Leu



Myopathy, KSS



(UUR)



Mitochondrial
MTTY
Mitochondrial
A5843G
tRNA Tyr



Myopathy

Cytopathy/





Cytopathy

FSGS





Mitochondrial
MTTK
Mitochondrial
A8326G
tRNA Lys



Myopathy

cytopathy





Cytopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTP
Mitochondrial
G15995A
tRNA Pro



Myopathy

cytopathy





Cytopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTF
Myoglobinuria
A606G
TRNA



Myopathy with



Phe



Myoglobinuria







Mitochondrial
MTTW
Gastrointestinal
G5532A
tRNA Trp



Myopathy,

Syndrome





Gastrointestinal







Syndrome







Mitochondrial
MTTK
MNGIE
G8313A
tRNA Lys



Myopathy,







Mitochondrial







Neurogastrointestinal







Encephalomyopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTG
CIPO
A10006G
tRNA Gly



Myopathy with







Chronic Intestinal







Pseudoobstruction







Mitochondrial
MTTS1
CIPO
C12246G
tRNA Ser



Myopathy with



(AGY)



Chronic Intestinal







Pseudoobstruction







Mitochondrial
MTTF
Tubulointerstitial
A608G
tRNA Phe



Myopathy with

nephritis





Renal Dysfunction







Mitochondrial
MTTT
LIMM
A15923G
tRNA Thr



Myopathy Lethal







Infantile







Mitochondrial







Myopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTT
LIMM
A15924G
tRNA Thr



Myopathy Lethal







Infantile







Mitochondrial







Myopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTL1
MMC
A3260G
tRNA Leu



Myopathy and



(UUR)



cardiomyopathy







Mitochondrial
MTTL1
MMC
C3303T
tRNA Leu



Myopathy and



(UUR)



cardiomyopathy







Maternaly Inherited
MTTI
MHCM
A4295G
tRNA Ile



Hypertrophic







Cardiomyopathy







Maternally Inherited
MTTI
MICM
A4300G
tRNA Ile



Cardiomyopathy







Cardiomyopathy
MTTK
Cardiomyopathy
A8348G
tRNA Lys



Maternally Inherited
MTTG
MHCM
T9997C
tRNA Gly



Hypertrophic







Cardiomyopathy







Maternally Inherited
MTTH
MICM
G12192A
tRNA His



Cardiomyopathy







Cardiomyopathy
MTTL2
Dilated
T12297C
tRNA Leu





Cardiomyopathy

(CUN)



Fatal Infantile
MTTI
FICP
A4269G
tRNA Ile



Cardiomyopathy







Plus (MELAS)







Fatal Infantile
MTTI
FICP
A4317G
tRNA Ile



Cardiomyopathy







Plus (MELAS)







Deafness
MTRNR
DEAF
A827G
12S




1


rRNA



Deafness
MTRNR
DEAF
T961C
12S




1


rRNA



Deafness
MTRNR
DEAF
T961delT+C(n)ins
12S




1


rRNA



Deafness
MTRNR
DEAF
T961insC
12S




1


rRNA



Deafness
MTRNR
DEAF
T1005C
12S




1


rRNA



Deafness
MTRNR
SNHL
T1095C
12S



Sensory Neural
1


rRNA



Hearing Loss







Deafness
MTRNR
DEAF
A1116G
12S




1


rRNA



Deafness
MTRNR
DEAF
C1494T
12S




1


rRNA



Deafness
MTRNR
DEAF
A1555G
12S




1


rRNA



Deafness
MTTS1
SNHL
T7510C
tRNA Ser



Sensory Neural



(UCN)



Hearing Loss







Deafness
MTTS1
SNHL
T7511C
tRNA



Sensory Neural



Ser(UCN)



Hearing Loss







Deafness
MTTS1
Deafness and Cerebellar
7472insC
tRNA



cerebellar

Dysfunction

Ser(UCN)



dysfunction







Deafness
MTTH
DEAF + RP
G12183A
tRNA His



Deafness Ataxia and
MTTE
Deafness, Mental
14709G
tRNA Glu



MR

Retaration,







Cerebellar Dysfunction





Diabetes Mellitus
MTRNR
DM
C1310T
12S




1






Diabetes Mellitus
MTRNR
DM
A1438G
12S




1






Diabetes Mellitus &
MTTL1
DM/DMDF
A3243G
tRNA Leu



Deafness



(UUR)



Diabetes Mellitus
MTTL1
DM
T3264C
tRNALeu







(UUR)



Diabetes Mellitus
MTTL1
DM
T3271C
tRNA Leu







(UUR)



Diabetes Mellitus
MTTI
Metabolic Syndrome &
T4291C
tRNA Ile



Metabolic

Hypomagnesemia





Syndrome







Diabetes Mellitus &
MTTK
DMDF/MERRF/HCM
A8296G
tRNA Lys



Deafness &







Cardiomyopathy







Diabetes Mellitus &
MTTS2
DMDF
C12258A
tRNA Ser



Deafness and



(AGY)



Retinitis Pigmentosa







Movement Disorder
MTTV
Movement Disorder
T1659C
tRNA Val



Alzheimer &
MTRNR
ADPD
G3196A
rRNA



Parkinson Disease
2


16S



Alzheimer &
MTTQ
ADPD/Hearing loss and
T4336C
tRNA Gln



Parkinson Disease

migraine





Deafness &







Migraine







Dementia and
MTTW
DEMCHO
G5549A
tRNA Trp



Chorea










Abbreviations


Plasmy: Ho, homoplasmy; He, heteroplasmy


*Disease: AD, Alzheimer's Disease; ADPD, Alzheimer's Disease and Parkinsons's Disease; CIPO Chronic Intestinal


Pseudoobstruction with myopathy and Ophthalmoplegia; CPEO, Chronic Progressive External Ophthalmoplegia; DEMCHO,


Dementia and Chorea; DM, Diabetes Mellitus; DMDF Diabetes Mellitus & Deafness; EXIT, exercise intolerance; FBSN Familial


Bilateral Striatal Necrosis; FICP Fatal Infantile Cardiomyopathy Plus, a MELAS-associated cardiomyopathy; HCM, Hypertrophic


CardioMyopathy; LS, Leigh Syndrome; MELAS, Mitochondrial Encephalomyopathy, Lactic Acidosis, and Stroke-like episodes;


MERRF Myoclonic Epilepsy and Ragged Red Muscle Fibers; MHCM Maternally Inherited Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy; MICM


Maternally Inherited Cardiomyopathy; MM, mitochondrial myopathy; NAION Nonarteritic Anterior Ischemic Optic Neuropathy;


NARP, Neurogenic muscle weakness, Ataxia, and Retinitis Pigmentosa; NIDDM, Non-Insulin Dependent Diabetes Mellitus; SNHL,


Sensorineural Hearing Loss.


**Status: Cfrm, considered confirmed by multiple reports in the literature; Prov, provisional isolated report(s), not yet confirmed by


multiple labs; P.M., reported originally in the literature at pathogenic but now generally considered to be a polymorphic variant.













TABLE 8







Disease phenotypes which are associated with


mitochondrial mutations and where similar phenotypes may be caused


by genomic mutations. Patients with these phenotypes,


whether due to mitochondrial or genomic mutations,


may benefit from OphNDI1 treatment. Possible target tissues


for therapies directed to these disorders are indicated.








Disease phenotype
Possible target tissue type





Encephalomyopathy
Brain, Muscle


Cardiomyopathy
Muscle


Myopathy
Muscle


Migraine
Brain


Gastrointestinal Reflux and
Brain


Sudden Infant Death Syndrome



Lactic Acidosis
Muscle


Muscle Weakness
Muscle


Deafness
Neurons


Alzheimer
Brain


Dementia
Brain


Epilepsy
Brain


Septo-Optic Dysplasia
Brain, Optic Nerve, Pituitary


Parkinson Disease
Brain


Anemia
Bone marrow


Dystonia
Brain


Ataxia
Brain


Sensory Neural Hearing Loss
Neurons in ear


Chorea
Brain


Retinitis Pigmentosa
Photoreceptor cell in retina


Exercise Intolerance
Muscles


Diabetes
Pancreas


Age related macular degeneration
Photoreceptor cell in retina








Claims
  • 1-49. (canceled)
  • 50. An isolated nucleic acid sequence encoding an immune optimised functional variant of the yeast NDI1 protein of SEQ ID NO: 542 comprising at least one conservative amino acid change to a residue selected from the group consisting of: L195, K284, K10, S143, L502, L403, A387, S86, F90, L94, K196, L19, K214, K373, L259, K511, L159, R479, L483, 182, F90, L89, V266, K214, L481, L202, L259, L195, L150, R85, Y151, Y482, S488, V45, L483, S80, and K196.
  • 51. The isolated nucleic acid sequence of claim 50, wherein 1 to 329 codons are codon optimised.
  • 52. The isolated nucleic acid sequence of claim 50, wherein the at least one conservative amino acid change is made to a residue selected from the group consisting of: L195, K284, S143, L502, L403, A387, S86, F90, L94, K196, L19, K214, K373, L259, K511, L159, R479, L483, I82, F90, L89, V266, K214, L481, L202, L259, L195, L150, R85, Y151, Y482, S488, V45, L483, S80, and K196.
  • 53. The isolated nucleic acid sequence of claim 50, wherein the at least one conservative amino acid change is selected from the group consisting of: L195F, K284E, S143N, L502M, L403I, A387S, S86K, F90H, L94M, K196E, L19M, K214E, K373E, L259F, K511E, L159M, R479Q, L483M, I82V, F90Y, L89I, V266I, K214E, L481I, L202M, L259V, L195I, L150M, R85K, Y151F, Y482F, S488T, V45I, L483M, S80T, and K196T.
  • 54. The isolated nucleic acid sequence of claim 50, wherein the at least one conservative amino acid change is made to a residue selected from the group consisting of V45, I82, V266, and F90.
  • 55. The isolated nucleic acid sequence of claim 50, wherein the at least one conservative amino acid change is selected from the group consisting of V45I, I82V, V266I, and F90Y.
  • 56. The isolated nucleic acid sequence of claim 50, wherein the immune optimised functional variant of the yeast NDI1 protein of SEQ ID NO: 542 comprises at least two of the conservative amino acid changes.
  • 57. The isolated nucleic acid sequence of claim 50, wherein the immune optimised functional variant of the yeast NDI1 protein of SEQ ID NO: 542 comprises at least three, four, five or six of the conservative amino acid changes.
  • 58. The isolated nucleic acid sequence of claim 50 that comprises at least 50 codons which are codon optimised compared with the sequence of wild-type yeast NDI1 gene of SEQ ID NO: 1.
  • 59. The isolated nucleic acid sequence of claim 50, wherein the nucleic acid comprises at least 100, 200, 300 or 329 codons which are codon optimised compared with the sequence of wild-type yeast NDI1 gene of SEQ ID NO: 1.
  • 60. The isolated nucleic acid sequence of claim 50, encoding an immune optimised functional variant of the yeast NDI1 protein having at least 90% or 95% sequence identity with SEQ ID NO: 542.
  • 61. The isolated nucleic acid sequence of claim 51 having a sequence selected from SEQ ID NO's: 75-145, 165-243, 264-341, 362-441, 462-541, 705-824, 835-884, 895-944 and 955-1004.
  • 62. An isolated nucleic acid sequence encoding yeast NDI1 protein of SEQ ID NO: 542 or a functional variant thereof having at least 90% or 95% sequence identity with SEQ ID NO: 542, wherein the nucleic acid comprises at least 50 codons which are codon optimised compared with the sequence of yeast NDI1 gene of SEQ ID NO: 1.
  • 63. The isolated nucleic acid of claim 62, wherein the nucleic acid comprises at least 100, 200, 300 or 329 codons which are codon optimised compared with the sequence of wild-type yeast NDI1 gene of SEQ ID NO: 1.
  • 64. A nucleic acid construct comprising a nucleic acid sequence of claim 50 and a nucleic acid sequence encoding a mitochondrial localisation sequence.
  • 65. A protein encoded by a nucleic acid sequence of claim 50.
  • 66. A vector comprising a nucleic acid sequence of claim 50.
  • 67. The vector of claim 66, wherein the vector is an adeno-associated virus (AAV).
  • 68. The vector of claim 66, further comprising a gene that enhances cell survival and or cell function, wherein the gene that enhances cell survival or cell function is optionally selected from a gene encoding a neurotrophic factor, a growth factor, an anti-apoptotic agent, an antioxidant, a cytokine, or a hormone.
  • 69. A cell transformed with a nucleic acid of claim 50.
  • 70. The cell of claim 69, selected from a group consisting of a stem cell, progenitor cell, RGC, and RGC precursor cell.
  • 71. A method of treating or preventing a neurodegenerative disease in an individual comprising a step of delivering a yeast NDI1 gene, or a variant thereof, and a neurotrophic factor, to the individual.
  • 72. The method of claim 71, wherein the neurodegenerative disease is LHON.
  • 73. A method for the treatment or prevention of a neurodegenerative disease, the method comprising a step of delivering a vector to an individual by means of intraocular delivery, wherein the vector comprises a nucleic acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1 or a nucleic acid sequence of claim 50, and wherein the vector is an adeno-associated vector (AAV).
  • 74. The method of claim 73, wherein the neurodegenerative disease is LHON.
  • 75. A vector comprising a nucleic acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1 or a nucleic acid sequence of claim 50, wherein the vector is an adeno-associated vector (AAV) and comprises a promoter in which the nucleic acid sequence is under the control of the promoter, and wherein the promoter is selected from (a) a promoter that is preferentially or specifically expressed in retinal ganglion cells and (b) a promotor that is specific to rod photoreceptor cells.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
11194796.6 Dec 2011 EP regional
PCT Information
Filing Document Filing Date Country Kind
PCT/EP2012/076697 12/21/2012 WO 00