A Network Approach to Gene Therapy for Refractory Epilepsies

Lead Research Organisation: University College London
Department Name: Institute of Neurology

Abstract

Epilepsy is a serious and common neurological disorder affecting up to 1% of the global population, and approximately a third of affected people continue to have seizures despite optimal medication. People with drug-resistant epilepsy typically cannot drive, have difficulties holding down jobs, have a high risk of depression and suicide, and are at risk of falls, injury and even death during a seizure. At present, the most successful treatment for drug-resistant surgery is to remove the brain area where seizures arise. This is not without risk, frequently impacts on memory and learning, and is often only partially effective. This option is not even available for the majority of patients with drug-resistant epilepsy because the brain region where seizures start is necessary for movement, language, memory or vision, or because the seizures arise from a distributed network of brain areas. Such patients currently are condemned to a very poor quality of life.

The search for new drugs to treat epilepsy is unlikely to lead to a breakthrough. Despite many new medications developed in the last 30 years, the rate of drug resistance in epilepsy has not changed. The main limitation is that drugs affect the whole brain rather than just the neurons or neuronal circuits that trigger seizures. There is a real need for new treatments that work in a completely different manner.

We are the world's foremost group of scientists and clinicians committed to developing gene therapy for drug-resistant epilepsy. Epilepsy gene therapy works by using ultra-safe viruses to alter the genetic make-up of neurons in order to make them reluctant to fire or less likely to recruit down-stream neurons. However, to increase the chances of success in patients, we need to deepen our understanding of how seizures arise and spread through the brain, in order to identify where to target our treatments. Sometimes the best approach may be to treat not just the part of the brain with identifiable structural abnormalities or where early seizure activity can be detected, but also other parts of the brain which can stop seizures from spreading. New miniaturised electronic devices now allow us to accurately map where seizures start and how they spread with much greater precision than we had before, and this opens new possibilities for treatments. We have a portfolio of molecular tools that allow us to quieten down small, defined regions of the brain, so that we can determine which of these areas are best targeted for controlling seizures. We have, furthermore, identified new ways to suppress the abnormal firing of neurons as soon as the seizure starts, stopping it in its tracks. The proposed research brings forward these inter-connected themes, and we will validate progress not only in terms of suppressing seizures but also by looking at effects on memory, mood and behaviour.

By discovering new regions of the brain that can control seizures, we will greatly expand the number of patients who can benefit from gene therapies. Our project will broaden the repertoire of gene therapies available for epilepsy, and identify the strongest candidates to progress to clinical trials. As a team we have already pioneered a clinical trial scheduled to begin in the next year, and therefore have a proven track record of taking discoveries from the bench to the bedside in this underfunded area of biomedicine.

Technical Summary

Drugs fail in many people with epilepsy, principally because they affect the whole brain. Surgery to destroy regions implicated in seizure generation is only suitable in very few patients. Gene therapy offers a rational alternative. Hitherto, it has relied upon treating a poorly defined epileptogenic focus, ignoring the emerging understanding of seizures as network phenomena.

Aim 1 is to identify the regions of the brain that are critical for the spread of seizures, using implanted Neuropixels probes, which allow the detection not only of local field potentials (which are dominated by synaptic currents) but also of action potentials across multiple brain regions.

Aim 2 is to determine whether acute manipulation of putative nodes of ictogenic networks, including piriform cortex and thalamic targets, is sufficient to block seizure propagation. As the project progresses new potential nodes arising from Aim 1 will be tested. Towards the end of the programme, we will determine which nodes or combinations should be treated to enhance treatment efficacy.

Aim 3 is to develop new tools optimised to stop the spread of seizures by potentiating potassium conductances. We will, in particular, focus on strategies for autoregulatory inhibition whereby a pathological glutamate elevation, as occurs in seizures, opens potassium channels. We will use human proteins to minimise obstacles to translation. We will also explore the potential of a secreted protein that upregulates potassium channels and has been implicated in both genetic and autoimmune epilepsy. These tools will be assessed in vitro and the most promising ones will be progressed to in vivo pre-clinical studies.

Throughout, we will use models of acute seizures and different aetiologies of epilepsy (hippocampal sclerosis, focal cortical dysplasia and inherited genetic mutations) to maximise clinical relevance. The work will feed into a translational pipeline that addresses an enormous health burden.
 
Title ACTIVITY-DEPENDENT GENE THERAPY FOR NEUROLOGICAL DISORDERS 
Description The invention provides expression vectors or vector systems comprising a polynucleotide sequence encoding a polypeptide, wherein the gene is operably linked to a neuronal activity-dependent promoter suitable to drive expression of the gene product in a subject's neural cells. The features of the expression vectors combine to advantageously improve the treatment of a neurological disorder associated with neuronal hyperexcitability in a subject. The invention also provides the expression vectors or vector systems for use in related methods of treatment, as well as viral particles, cells, kits and methods using the expression vectors or vector systems. 
IP Reference WO2021191474 
Protection Patent application published
Year Protection Granted 2021
Licensed No
Impact This provides a novel approach to treat epilepsy. A spinout company with a licence to the patent is in the process of being created, with seed capital from the UCL Technology Fund,
 
Title Endogenous gene regulation to treat neurological disorders and diseases 
Description Use of CRISPR-activation to upregulate endogenous gene expression to treat neurological disorders and diseases 
IP Reference  
Protection Patent / Patent application
Year Protection Granted 2022
Licensed No
Impact This invention has led to translational funding from the UCL Technology Fund
 
Title SYNTHETIC RECEPTORS 
Description The invention relates to modified G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) which (i) have decreased responsiveness to an endogenous activating ligand, and (ii) may be activated by exogenous agonists, which may be relatively benign over the counter drugs such as antihistamines. The modifications comprise mutations at particular amino acid positions, relative to the unmodified GPCRs. The invention also provides methods of use comprising administration of the modified GPCRs, for example in treating a neurological circuit disorder. 
IP Reference WO2022238513 
Protection Patent / Patent application
Year Protection Granted 2022
Licensed No
Impact This overcomes limitations of DREADDs and is potentially amenable to clinical translation.