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Dive into the research topics where Chun-Wei Hsu is active.

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Featured researches published by Chun-Wei Hsu.


Molecular Medicine | 2012

Long-term safety and efficacy of human-induced pluripotent stem cell (iPS) grafts in a preclinical model of retinitis pigmentosa.

Yao Li; Yi-Ting Tsai; Chun-Wei Hsu; Deniz Erol; Jin Yang; Wen-Hsuan Wu; Richard J. Davis; Dieter Egli; Stephen H. Tsang

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration recently approved phase I/II clinical trials for embryonic stem (ES) cell-based retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) transplantation, but this allograft transplantation requires lifelong immunosuppressive therapy. Autografts from patient-specific induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells offer an alternative solution to this problem. However, more data are required to establish the safety and efficacy of iPS transplantation in animal models before moving iPS therapy into clinical trials. This study examines the efficacy of iPS transplantation in restoring functional vision in Rpe65rd12/Rpe65rd12 mice, a clinically relevant model of retinitis pigmentosa (RP). Human iPS cells were differentiated into morphologically and functionally RPE-like tissue. Quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and immunoblots confirmed RPE fate. The iPS-derived RPE cells were injected into the subretinal space of Rpe65rd12/Rpe65rd12 mice at 2 d postnatally. After transplantation, the long-term surviving iPS-derived RPE graft colocalized with the host native RPE cells and assimilated into the host retina without disruption. None of the mice receiving transplants developed tumors over their lifetimes. Furthermore, electroretinogram, a standard method for measuring efficacy in human trials, demonstrated improved visual function in recipients over the lifetime of this RP mouse model. Our study provides the first direct evidence of functional recovery in a clinically relevant model of retinal degeneration using iPS transplantation and supports the feasibility of autologous iPS cell transplantation for retinal and macular degenerations featuring significant RPE loss.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2014

Validation of genome-wide association study (GWAS)-identified disease risk alleles with patient-specific stem cell lines

Jin Yang; Yao Li; Lawrence Chan; Yi-Ting Tsai; Wen-Hsuan Wu; Huy V. Nguyen; Chun-Wei Hsu; Xiaorong Li; Lewis M. Brown; Dieter Egli; Janet R. Sparrow; Stephen H. Tsang

While the past decade has seen great progress in mapping loci for common diseases, studying how these risk alleles lead to pathology remains a challenge. Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) affects 9 million older Americans, and is characterized by the loss of the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). Although the closely linked genome-wide association studies ARMS2/HTRA1 genes, located at the chromosome 10q26 locus, are strongly associated with the risk of AMD, their downstream targets are unknown. Low population frequencies of risk alleles in tissue banks make it impractical to study their function in cells derived from autopsied tissue. Moreover, autopsy eyes from end-stage AMD patients, where age-related RPE atrophy and fibrosis are already present, cannot be used to determine how abnormal ARMS2/HTRA1 expression can initiate RPE pathology. Instead, induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cell-derived RPE from patients provides us with earlier stage AMD patient-specific cells and allows us to analyze the underlying mechanisms at this critical time point. An unbiased proteome screen of A2E-aged patient-specific iPS-derived RPE cell lines identified superoxide dismutase 2 (SOD2)-mediated antioxidative defense in the genetic alleles susceptibility of AMD. The AMD-associated risk haplotype (T-in/del-A) impairs the ability of the RPE to defend against aging-related oxidative stress. SOD2 defense is impaired in RPE homozygous for the risk haplotype (T-in/del-A; T-in/del-A), while the effect was less pronounced in RPE homozygous for the protective haplotype (G-Wt-G; G-Wt-G). ARMS2/HTRA1 risk alleles decrease SOD2 defense, making RPE more susceptible to oxidative damage and thereby contributing to AMD pathogenesis.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Therapeutic Margins in a Novel Preclinical Model of Retinitis Pigmentosa

Richard J. Davis; Chun-Wei Hsu; Yi-Ting Tsai; Katherine J. Wert; Javier Sancho-Pelluz; Chyuan-Sheng Lin; Stephen H. Tsang

The third-most common cause of autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is due to defective cGMP phosphodiesterase-6 (PDE6). Previous work using viral gene therapy on PDE6-mutant mouse models demonstrated photoreceptors can be rescued if administered before degeneration. However, whether visual function can be rescued after degeneration onset has not been addressed. This is a clinically important question, as newly diagnosed patients exhibit considerable loss of rods and cones in their peripheral retinas. We have generated and characterized a tamoxifen inducible Cre-loxP rescue allele, Pde6bStop, which allows us to temporally correct PDE6-deficiency. Whereas untreated mutants exhibit degeneration, activation of Cre-loxP recombination in early embryogenesis produced stable long-term rescue. Reversal at later time-points showed partial long-term or short-lived rescue. Our results suggest stable restoration of retinal function by gene therapy can be achieved if a sufficient number of rods are treated. Because patients are generally diagnosed after extensive loss of rods, the success of clinical trials may depend on identifying patients as early as possible to maximize the number of treatable rods.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2016

Reprogramming metabolism by targeting sirtuin 6 attenuates retinal degeneration

Lijuan Zhang; Jianhai Du; Sally Justus; Chun-Wei Hsu; Luis Bonet-Ponce; Wen-Hsuan Wu; Yi-Ting Tsai; Wei-Pu Wu; Yading Jia; Jimmy Duong; Vinit B. Mahajan; Chyuan-Sheng Lin; Shuang Wang; James B. Hurley; Stephen H. Tsang

Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) encompasses a diverse group of Mendelian disorders leading to progressive degeneration of rods and then cones. For reasons that remain unclear, diseased RP photoreceptors begin to deteriorate, eventually leading to cell death and, consequently, loss of vision. Here, we have hypothesized that RP associated with mutations in phosphodiesterase-6 (PDE6) provokes a metabolic aberration in rod cells that promotes the pathological consequences of elevated cGMP and Ca2+, which are induced by the Pde6 mutation. Inhibition of sirtuin 6 (SIRT6), a histone deacetylase repressor of glycolytic flux, reprogrammed rods into perpetual glycolysis, thereby driving the accumulation of biosynthetic intermediates, improving outer segment (OS) length, enhancing photoreceptor survival, and preserving vision. In mouse retinae lacking Sirt6, effectors of glycolytic flux were dramatically increased, leading to upregulation of key intermediates in glycolysis, TCA cycle, and glutaminolysis. Both transgenic and AAV2/8 gene therapy-mediated ablation of Sirt6 in rods provided electrophysiological and anatomic rescue of both rod and cone photoreceptors in a preclinical model of RP. Due to the extensive network of downstream effectors of Sirt6, this study motivates further research into the role that these pathways play in retinal degeneration. Because reprogramming metabolism by enhancing glycolysis is not gene specific, this strategy may be applicable to a wide range of neurodegenerative disorders.


Molecular Medicine | 2012

Mice with a D190N Mutation in the Gene Encoding Rhodopsin: A Model for Human Autosomal-Dominant Retinitis Pigmentosa

Javier Sancho-Pelluz; Joaquin Tosi; Chun-Wei Hsu; Frances Lee; Kyle Wolpert; Mirela Tabacaru; Jonathan P. Greenberg; Stephen H. Tsang; Chyuan-Sheng Lin

Rhodopsin is the G protein-coupled receptor in charge of initiating signal transduction in rod photoreceptor cells upon the arrival of the photon. D190N (RhoD190n), a missense mutation in rhodopsin, causes autosomal-dominant retinitis pigmentosa (adRP) in humans. Affected patients present hyperfluorescent retinal rings and progressive rod photoreceptor degeneration. Studies in humans cannot reveal the molecular processes causing the earliest stages of the condition, thus necessitating the creation of an appropriate animal model. A knock-in mouse model with the D190N mutation was engineered to study the pathogenesis of the disease. Electrophysiological and histological findings in the mouse were similar to those observed in human patients, and the hyperfluorescence pattern was analogous to that seen in humans, confirming that the D190N mouse is an accurate model for the study of adRP.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017

Genetic rescue models refute nonautonomous rod cell death in retinitis pigmentosa

Susanne Koch; Jimmy Duong; Chun-Wei Hsu; Yi-Ting Tsai; Chyuan-Sheng Lin; Christian Wahl-Schott; Stephen H. Tsang

Significance Retinitis pigmentosa is the leading cause of inherited blindness. Although gene therapy has the capacity to rescue diseased cells (usually rods), current methods generate retinas that are a mix of treated, rescued and untreated, dying rods. To determine whether the dying rods negatively impact rescue, we developed mouse models that allowed us to treat defined fractions of diseased rods. We found that dying rods did not trigger the death of rescued photoreceptors, even when the rescued cells are greatly outnumbered. On the other hand, the rescued photoreceptors did exhibit long-term defects, which were less severe when more rods were treated. Thus, although genetic rescue leads to survival of treated rods, it does not prevent other aspects of the retinitis pigmentosa pathology. Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is an inherited neurodegenerative disease, in which the death of mutant rod photoreceptors leads secondarily to the non-cell autonomous death of cone photoreceptors. Gene therapy is a promising treatment strategy. Unfortunately, current methods of gene delivery treat only a fraction of diseased cells, yielding retinas that are a mosaic of treated and untreated rods, as well as cones. In this study, we created two RP mouse models to test whether dying, untreated rods negatively impact treated, rescued rods. In one model, treated and untreated rods were segregated. In the second model, treated and untreated rods were diffusely intermixed, and their ratio was controlled to achieve low-, medium-, or high-efficiency rescue. Analysis of these mosaic retinas demonstrated that rescued rods (and cones) survive, even when they are greatly outnumbered by dying photoreceptors. On the other hand, the rescued photoreceptors did exhibit long-term defects in their outer segments (OSs), which were less severe when more photoreceptors were treated. In summary, our study suggests that even low-efficiency gene therapy may achieve stable survival of rescued photoreceptors in RP patients, albeit with OS dysgenesis.


Scientific Reports | 2017

Gene Therapy Restores Mfrp and Corrects Axial Eye Length

Gabriel Velez; Stephen H. Tsang; Yi-Ting Tsai; Chun-Wei Hsu; Anuradha Gore; Aliaa H. Abdelhakim; MaryAnn Mahajan; Ronald H. Silverman; Janet R. Sparrow; Alexander G. Bassuk; Vinit B. Mahajan

Hyperopia (farsightedness) is a common and significant cause of visual impairment, and extreme hyperopia (nanophthalmos) is a consequence of loss-of-function MFRP mutations. MFRP deficiency causes abnormal eye growth along the visual axis and significant visual comorbidities, such as angle closure glaucoma, cystic macular edema, and exudative retinal detachment. The Mfrprd6/Mfrprd6 mouse is used as a pre-clinical animal model of retinal degeneration, and we found it was also hyperopic. To test the effect of restoring Mfrp expression, we delivered a wild-type Mfrp to the retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) of Mfrprd6/Mfrprd6 mice via adeno-associated viral (AAV) gene therapy. Phenotypic rescue was evaluated using non-invasive, human clinical testing, including fundus auto-fluorescence, optical coherence tomography, electroretinography, and ultrasound. These analyses showed gene therapy restored retinal function and normalized axial length. Proteomic analysis of RPE tissue revealed rescue of specific proteins associated with eye growth and normal retinal and RPE function. The favorable response to gene therapy in Mfrprd6/Mfrprd6 mice suggests hyperopia and associated refractive errors may be amenable to AAV gene therapy.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2016

Reprogramming towards anabolism impedes degeneration in a preclinical model of retinitis pigmentosa

Lijuan Zhang; Sally Justus; Yu Xu; Tamara Pluchenik; Chun-Wei Hsu; Jin Yang; Jimmy Duong; Chyuan-Sheng Lin; Yading Jia; Alexander G. Bassuk; Vinit B. Mahajan; Stephen H. Tsang

Retinitis pigmentosa (RP) is an incurable neurodegenerative condition featuring photoreceptor death that leads to blindness. Currently, there is no approved therapeutic for photoreceptor degenerative conditions like RP and atrophic age-related macular degeneration (AMD). Although there are promising results in human gene therapy, RP is a genetically diverse disorder, such that gene-specific therapies would be practical in a small fraction of patients with RP. Here, we explore a non-gene-specific strategy that entails reprogramming photoreceptors towards anabolism by upregulating the mechanistic target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway. We conditionally ablated the tuberous sclerosis complex 1 (Tsc1) gene, an mTOR inhibitor, in the rods of the Pde6bH620Q/H620Q preclinical RP mouse model and observed, functionally and morphologically, an improvement in the survival of rods and cones at early and late disease stages. These results elucidate the ability of reprogramming the metabolome to slow photoreceptor degeneration. This strategy may also be applicable to a wider range of neurodegenerative diseases, as enhancement of nutrient uptake is not gene-specific and is implicated in multiple pathologies. Enhancing anabolism promoted neuronal survival and function and could potentially benefit a number of photoreceptor and other degenerative conditions.


Archive | 2016

Genome Editing in the Retina: A Case Study in CRISPR for a Patient-Specific Autosomal Dominant Retinitis Pigmentosa Model

Sally Justus; Andrew Zheng; Yi-Ting Tsai; Wen-Hsuan Wu; Chun-Wei Hsu; Wei-Pu Wu; Alexander G. Bassuk; Vinit B. Mahajan; Stephen H. Tsang

The future of precision medicine, genome editing has gained momentum in the field of ophthalmology because of the eye’s amenability to genetic interventions. The eye is an ideal target for gene therapy due to its accessibility, ease of noninvasive monitoring, significant compartmentalization, immunoprivileged status, optical transparency, and the presence of a contralateral control. One of the first gene therapy clinical trials was conducted in the eye for a severe form of early-onset retinal dystrophy called Leber congenital amaurosis, and it has encouraged further exploration of this technique as a viable treatment option for other inherited disorders across medical disciplines. This chapter highlights current ocular gene therapy approaches, clinical and preclinical experiments, and provides a case study of the bench-to-bedside personalized medicine approach taken for a novel and rare retinitis pigmentosa mutation.


Molecular Therapy | 2018

Genetic rescue reverses microglial activation in preclinical models of retinitis pigmentosa

Lijuan Zhang; Xuan Cui; Ruben Jauregui; Karen Sophia Park; Sally Justus; Yi-Ting Tsai; Jimmy Duong; Chun-Wei Hsu; Wen-Hsuan Wu; Christine L. Xu; Chyuan-Sheng Lin; Stephen H. Tsang

Microglia cells (MGCs) play a key role in scavenging pathogens and phagocytosing cellular debris in the central nervous system and retina. Their activation, however, contributes to the progression of multiple degenerative diseases. Given the potential damage created by MGCs, it is important to better understand their mechanism of activation. Here, we explored the role of MGCs in the context of retinitis pigmentosa (RP) by using four independent preclinical mouse models. For therapeutic modeling, tamoxifen-inducible CreER was introduced to explore changes in MGCs when RP progression halted. The phenotypes of the MGCs were observed using live optical coherence tomography, live autofluorescence, and immunohistochemistry. We found that, regardless of genetic background, MGCs were activated in neurodegenerative conditions and migrated beyond the layers where they are typically found to the inner and outer segments, where degeneration was ongoing. Genetic rescue not only halted degeneration but also deactivated MGCs, regardless of whether the intervention occurred at the early, middle, or late stage of the disease. These findings suggest that halting long-term disease progression may be more successful by downregulating MGC activity while co-administering the therapeutic intervention.

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Alexander G. Bassuk

Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine

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Sally Justus

NewYork–Presbyterian Hospital

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