Gene Therapy in a New Light
A husband-and-wife team's experimental genetic treatment for blindness is renewing hopes for a controversial field of medicine
- By Jocelyn Kaiser
- Photographs by Stephen Voss
- Smithsonian magazine, January 2009, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
In 1989, during one of Maguire's last training stops, in Royal Oaks, Michigan, Bennett set up makeshift labs in the building next door to the hospital and in the basement of their home. They conducted what they think was the first gene-therapy experiment involving the retina. Using mice and rabbits, they injected a gene for an enzyme found in bacteria. They used a dye to reveal whether the eye cells had built the enzyme, and the experiment succeeded: the animals' retinas turned blue for about two weeks.
At Penn, they published one of the first two papers showing that a virus endowed with a foreign gene could shuttle it into eye tissue, in this case in mice. (This strategy, common in gene-therapy experiments, essentially co-opts the virus' capacity to replicate by injecting its own genetic material into cells.) Bennett and Maguire later inserted therapeutic genes into the eyes of some Irish setters with inherited blindness. But Bennett thought the improvement in the dogs wasn't compelling enough to warrant a human trial. What they needed was a simple, slowly progressing form of blindness that was related to a disease that afflicts people. In 1998, they learned of a breed of briard dog in Sweden with an eye disease that, by a fluke, happened to be caused by one of the genetic mutations found in some patients with LCA.
About 3,000 people in the United States suffer from LCA, which encompasses several different blindness disorders that begin in childhood and are caused by mutations in any of several genes, one of which is called RPE65. It contains the instructions for an enzyme crucial to the retina's light-sensing cells, the rods and cones; the enzyme converts vitamin A into a form that the rods and cones use to make a necessary pigment, rhodopsin. In people who inherit a bad copy of the RPE65 gene from each parent, the rods and cones, deprived of rhodopsin, malfunction and eventually die.
Bennett, Maguire and co-workers used a virus called adeno-associated virus to insert a good copy of the RPE65 gene into three young briards. The AAV virus' two genes had been replaced with the RPE65 gene plus a string of DNA that switches the gene on. The dogs regained enough vision to navigate a maze. "It was fantastically exciting," Bennett says. One dog, Lancelot, became a kind of poster dog for gene therapy, shaking paws with people at press conferences and fundraisers.
On the sidewalk outside her office, Bennett shows off one of the more than 50 dogs they have treated. Venus, a medium-size briard with brown, wiry hair, strains at her leash and would clearly like to race away, but she sits to let a visitor pet her. "When she came here, she couldn't see a thing. She would crouch in a corner or in a cage baring her teeth at people," Bennett says. That was a year ago, before the Bennett/Maguire team treated the then 1-year-old in both eyes with gene therapy. Though still night blind, Venus can now hop over obstacles strewn along a corridor and catch a tennis ball. "Her behavior was transformed," Bennett says. "She's seeing well in both eyes. She's a very happy dog."
When they first tried the treatment in people, Bennett and Maguire didn't expect their patients to improve as much as the dogs. For one thing, the doctors were testing safety first and used low doses of the virus and gene. And their first patients, all from an eye clinic in Italy that tests blind patients for genetic defects, were 26-year-old twins and a 19-year-old. By that age, LCA patients don't have much retinal tissue left. Most are completely blind by age 40.
Still, Bennett and Maguire didn't know what to expect when they treated the first patient, one of the twins. He was anesthetized, then Maguire made several small incisions and replaced the gel-like vitreous material in the man's eye with a salt solution so that Maguire could maneuver a needle through it more easily. Using a microscope, he threaded a hair-thin needle through the white of the eye until it touched the retina. He injected 150 microliters of a solution (a drop the size of a pea) that contained 15 billion copies of the AAV virus with the RPE65 gene. The virus is considered an extremely safe delivery mechanism—it can't replicate on its own, and it doesn't cause disease in humans.
All the same, that night "I didn't sleep at all," says Maguire, who was worried about an immune reaction. To his relief, there wasn't any.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.
Related topics: Vision DNA Disease and Illnesses
Additional Sources
"Preliminary Results of Gene Therapy for Retinal Degeneration," Joan W. Miller, New England Journal of Medicine, May 22, 2008
"Effect of Gene Therapy on Visual Function in Leber's Congenital Amaurosis," James. W.B. Bainbridge et al., New England Journal of Medicine, May 22, 2008
"Safety and Efficacy of Gene Transfer for Leber's Congenital Amaurosis," Albert M. Maguire et al., New England Journal of Medicine, May 22, 2008









Comments (33)
+ View All Comments
Dear Dr. Jean Bennett,
dear Dr. Albert M. Maquire,
we are living in Germany and we've seen the video and the article about one shot of gene therapy and children with congenital blindness can now see.
Our 2 years grandchild is suffering from LCA, he has only light perception, he tries to fingure out dark objects runs to catch it. Reading above articles and comments of difference people. Can you suggest me how to apply for genetic test and is there any treatment for our grandchild.
We would be thankful, to recive a message from you. Also we would like to contact you by phone or skype.
We have different results from human geneticist, retinal doctor and a current result by MRT (nuclear magnetic resonanz imaging). These can be send to you via email.
If there is only a small chance, we will take our grandchild to Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, USA.
Thank you again for your quick reply.
Yours sincerely,
Dr. Barbara Jane Isenheim
Posted by Dr. Barbara J. Isenheim on November 23,2011 | 08:30 AM
I am 39 and have had dry macular degeneration for about 7 years..now I also have wet in my left eye. Has anyone heard of anyone at his young age having this??? I am very worried. I started getting shots last month and I have 3 more to go....NO change yet...
Posted by Lori sveum on January 8,2010 | 02:20 PM
i have Rp and an 28 years old. Want to know if any one so far has been cured through jean therapy-please let me know .
Posted by Yahya on December 31,2009 | 01:14 PM
My 8months daughter is suffering from LCA, she has only light perception, her eye movements always goes up. Reading above articles and comments of difference people. can any one suggest me how to apply for genetic test and is there any treatment for my daugher
Posted by RAJI on September 24,2009 | 05:39 AM
I have been diagnosed with retinal artery occlusion in my right eye. I have partial blindness in this eye.
Is there any gene therapy currently being done for this condition?
Thank you for any information you can provide me.
Tom Thomas, High Springs, Fl.
Posted by Tom Thomas on August 24,2009 | 02:35 PM
Five years ago my sister had caterac surgery first in one eye then the other, after the second eye was done, she lost her vision.
She says it is as if she does not have enough light. She can see a picture frame but cannot see the detail, it seems there is a problem with her optic nerve, we are very interested in being a part of clinical trials, she so wants to see again. Please contact us.
Thank you
Stella Noriega, Albuquerque, NM.
Posted by Stella Noriega on July 14,2009 | 12:53 AM
Good, a way to get around blindness would be huge in our society today and show science's reach.
Posted by Matthew Brown on May 6,2009 | 10:26 AM
Great article...very interesting
Posted by Mike Lowry on May 4,2009 | 10:32 PM
please tell us wat to do we feel so alone and nothing has really helped us cope with this my sons 23 was diagnosed at 14 we are so interested in the gene therapy we will do anything but when we visit moorfields nothing or hope isnt given please can u tell us more about wat to do to get this treatment thanku miss a sinclair his mother
Posted by martin hardy on April 29,2009 | 05:35 PM
My 2 years daughter is suffering from LCA, she has only light perception, she tries to fingure out dark objects runs to catch it. Reading above articles and comments of difference people. can any one suggest me how to apply for genetic test and is there any treatment for my daugher
Posted by RAJESH HARIYAN on April 29,2009 | 12:04 PM
I can't see! is what I've been hearing for years now.My son is blind has little light reflecting in his eyes. Its called hope. Please make it your gift to him.He wants to see again.
Posted by jordan davis on March 10,2009 | 10:13 PM
Hi, I am 26 years old living with Stargardts Disease. I was diagnosed with this disease when I was 22 . I cant see the letters on computer screens clearly and have difficulty in reading bill boards, bus booards, restaurants and at airports. I am afraid of losing my independence. Please let me know the details of the clinical trials for Stargardts Disease. Your article gives me so much HOPE and HAPPIBESS to me. Does the gene therapy preserve sight or cure blindness. Also does it affect the night vision. Please email me. Thanks, Dester
Posted by dester on March 6,2009 | 02:51 AM
Hello,I am Thai RP boy with a 33 years old.I would like to know when the gene therapy will bring to treatment for RP patient completely.I so serious about my eyes.It make me diffedence to myself.I live in Bangkok,Thailand.If you have any suggestion please let me know at my e-mail address tik_pannapong@yahoo.com I will appreciate for any your kindness to suggest me. God bless you all.
Posted by pannapong on February 8,2009 | 11:11 PM
Hello, thank you for your article, it is truly inspiring. Yes it is true this is an emotional issue, I know I am a person with RP and I know what it is like to be afflicted with this although thank God I have great cental vision and want to keep it that way. I am totally available for trials as well and would love to know if folks like us who have RP are good candidates for this, if you can pass this email on to the good doctors please, I am 43 yrs old and ready to say good riddance to this blasted disease, thanks.
Posted by Tony E. on February 8,2009 | 03:17 AM
+ View All Comments