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Dive into the research topics where Claire Hippert is active.

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Featured researches published by Claire Hippert.


Nature | 2012

Restoration of vision after transplantation of photoreceptors

Rachael A. Pearson; Amanda C. Barber; Matteo Rizzi; Claire Hippert; Tian Xue; Emma L. West; Yanai Duran; Anthony J. Smith; J. Z. Chuang; S A Sultana Azam; Ulrich F.O. Luhmann; Andrea Benucci; Choon Ho Sung; James W. Bainbridge; Matteo Carandini; King Wai Yau; Jane C. Sowden; Robin R. Ali

Cell transplantation is a potential strategy for treating blindness caused by the loss of photoreceptors. Although transplanted rod-precursor cells are able to migrate into the adult retina and differentiate to acquire the specialized morphological features of mature photoreceptor cells, the fundamental question remains whether transplantation of photoreceptor cells can actually improve vision. Here we provide evidence of functional rod-mediated vision after photoreceptor transplantation in adult Gnat1−/− mice, which lack rod function and are a model of congenital stationary night blindness. We show that transplanted rod precursors form classic triad synaptic connections with second-order bipolar and horizontal cells in the recipient retina. The newly integrated photoreceptor cells are light-responsive with dim-flash kinetics similar to adult wild-type photoreceptors. By using intrinsic imaging under scotopic conditions we demonstrate that visual signals generated by transplanted rods are projected to higher visual areas, including V1. Moreover, these cells are capable of driving optokinetic head tracking and visually guided behaviour in the Gnat1−/− mouse under scotopic conditions. Together, these results demonstrate the feasibility of photoreceptor transplantation as a therapeutic strategy for restoring vision after retinal degeneration.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Repair of the degenerate retina by photoreceptor transplantation

Amanda C. Barber; Claire Hippert; Yanai Duran; Emma L. West; James W. Bainbridge; Katherine Warre-Cornish; Ulrich F.O. Luhmann; Jorn Lakowski; Jane C. Sowden; Robin R. Ali; Rachael A. Pearson

Despite different aetiologies, age-related macular degeneration and most inherited retinal disorders culminate in the same final common pathway, the loss of photoreceptors. There are few treatments and none reverse the loss of vision. Photoreceptor replacement by transplantation is proposed as a broad treatment strategy applicable to all degenerations. Recently, we demonstrated restoration of vision following rod-photoreceptor transplantation into a mouse model of stationary night-blindness, raising the critical question of whether photoreceptor replacement is equally effective in different types and stages of degeneration. We present a comprehensive assessment of rod-photoreceptor transplantation across six murine models of inherited photoreceptor degeneration. Transplantation is feasible in all models examined but disease type has a major impact on outcome, as assessed both by the morphology and number of integrated rod-photoreceptors. Integration can increase (Prph2+/Δ307), decrease (Crb1rd8/rd8, Gnat1−/−, Rho−/−), or remain constant (PDE6βrd1/rd1, Prph2rd2/rd2) with disease progression, depending upon the gene defect, with no correlation with severity. Robust integration is possible even in late-stage disease. Glial scarring and outer limiting membrane integrity, features that change with degeneration, significantly affect transplanted photoreceptor integration. Combined breakdown of these barriers markedly increases integration in a model with an intact outer limiting membrane, strong gliotic response, and otherwise poor transplantation outcome (Rho−/−), leading to an eightfold increase in integration and restoration of visual function. Thus, it is possible to achieve robust integration across a broad range of inherited retinopathies. Moreover, transplantation outcome can be improved by administering appropriate, tailored manipulations of the recipient environment.


Stem Cells | 2012

Defining the Integration Capacity of Embryonic Stem Cell-Derived Photoreceptor Precursors

Emma L. West; Anai Gonzalez-Cordero; Claire Hippert; Fumitaka Osakada; Juan Pedro Martinez-Barbera; Rachael A. Pearson; Jane C. Sowden; Masayo Takahashi; Robin R. Ali

Retinal degeneration is a leading cause of irreversible blindness in the developed world. Differentiation of retinal cells, including photoreceptors, from both mouse and human embryonic stem cells (ESCs) and induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs), potentially provide a renewable source of cells for retinal transplantation. Previously, we have shown both the functional integration of transplanted rod photoreceptor precursors, isolated from the postnatal retina, in the adult murine retina, and photoreceptor cell generation by stepwise treatment of ESCs with defined factors. In this study, we assessed the extent to which this protocol recapitulates retinal development and also evaluated differentiation and integration of ESC‐derived retinal cells following transplantation using our established procedures. Optimized retinal differentiation via isolation of Rax.GFP retinal progenitors recreated a retinal niche and increased the yield of Crx+ and Rhodopsin+ photoreceptors. Rod birth peaked at day 20 of culture and expression of the early photoreceptor markers Crx and Nrl increased until day 28. Nrl levels were low in ESC‐derived populations compared with developing retinae. Transplantation of early stage retinal cultures produced large tumors, which were avoided by prolonged retinal differentiation (up to day 28) prior to transplantation. Integrated mature photoreceptors were not observed in the adult retina, even when more than 60% of transplanted ESC‐derived cells expressed Crx. We conclude that exclusion of proliferative cells from ESC‐derived cultures is essential for effective transplantation. Despite showing expression profiles characteristic of immature photoreceptors, the ESC‐derived precursors generated using this protocol did not display transplantation competence equivalent to precursors from the postnatal retina. Stem Cells2012;30:1424–1435


PLOS ONE | 2015

Müller glia activation in response to inherited retinal degeneration is highly varied and disease-specific.

Claire Hippert; Anna B. Graca; Amanda C. Barber; Emma L. West; Alexander J. Smith; Robin R. Ali; Rachael A. Pearson

Despite different aetiologies, most inherited retinal disorders culminate in photoreceptor loss, which induces concomitant changes in the neural retina, one of the most striking being reactive gliosis by Müller cells. It is typically assumed that photoreceptor loss leads to an upregulation of glial fibrilliary acidic protein (Gfap) and other intermediate filament proteins, together with other gliosis-related changes, including loss of integrity of the outer limiting membrane (OLM) and deposition of proteoglycans. However, this is based on a mix of both injury-induced and genetic causes of photoreceptor loss. There are very few longitudinal studies of gliosis in the retina and none comparing these changes across models over time. Here, we present a comprehensive spatiotemporal assessment of features of gliosis in the degenerating murine retina that involves Müller glia. Specifically, we assessed Gfap, vimentin and chondroitin sulphate proteoglycan (CSPG) levels and outer limiting membrane (OLM) integrity over time in four murine models of inherited photoreceptor degeneration that encompass a range of disease severities (Crb1rd8/rd8, Prph2+/Δ307, Rho-/-, Pde6brd1/rd1). These features underwent very different changes, depending upon the disease-causing mutation, and that these changes are not correlated with disease severity. Intermediate filament expression did indeed increase with disease progression in Crb1rd8/rd8 and Prph2+/Δ307, but decreased in the Prph2+/Δ307 and Pde6brd1/rd1 models. CSPG deposition usually, but not always, followed the trends in intermediate filament expression. The OLM adherens junctions underwent significant remodelling in all models, but with differences in the composition of the resulting junctions; in Rho-/- mice, the adherens junctions maintained the typical rod-Müller glia interactions, while in the Pde6brd1/rd1 model they formed predominantly between Müller cells in late stage of degeneration. Together, these results show that gliosis and its associated processes are variable and disease-dependent.


Visual Neuroscience | 2014

Photoreceptor replacement therapy: challenges presented by the diseased recipient retinal environment.

Rachael A. Pearson; Claire Hippert; Anna B. Graca; Amanda C. Barber

Vision loss caused by the death of photoreceptors is the leading cause of irreversible blindness in the developed world. Rapid advances in stem cell biology and techniques in cell transplantation have made photoreceptor replacement by transplantation a very plausible therapeutic strategy. These advances include the demonstration of restoration of vision following photoreceptor transplantation and the generation of transplantable populations of donor cells from stem cells. In this review, we present a brief overview of the recent progress in photoreceptor transplantation. We then consider in more detail some of the challenges presented by the degenerating retinal environment that must play host to these transplanted cells, how these may influence transplanted photoreceptor cell integration and survival, and some of the progress in developing strategies to circumnavigate these issues.


Stem cell reports | 2018

Transplanted Donor- or Stem Cell-Derived Cone Photoreceptors Can Both Integrate and Undergo Material Transfer in an Environment-Dependent Manner

Paul V. Waldron; Fabiana Di Marco; Kamil Kruczek; Joana Ribeiro; Anna B. Graca; Claire Hippert; Nozie D. Aghaizu; Aikaterini Kalargyrou; Amanda C. Barber; Giulia Grimaldi; Yanai Duran; Samuel J.I. Blackford; Magdalena Kloc; Debbie Goh; Eduardo Zabala Aldunate; Robert D. Sampson; James W. Bainbridge; Alexander J. Smith; Anai Gonzalez-Cordero; Jane C. Sowden; Robin R. Ali; Rachael A. Pearson

Summary Human vision relies heavily upon cone photoreceptors, and their loss results in permanent visual impairment. Transplantation of healthy photoreceptors can restore visual function in models of inherited blindness, a process previously understood to arise by donor cell integration within the host retina. However, we and others recently demonstrated that donor rod photoreceptors engage in material transfer with host photoreceptors, leading to the host cells acquiring proteins otherwise expressed only by donor cells. We sought to determine whether stem cell- and donor-derived cones undergo integration and/or material transfer. We find that material transfer accounts for a significant proportion of rescued cells following cone transplantation into non-degenerative hosts. Strikingly, however, substantial numbers of cones integrated into the Nrl−/− and Prph2rd2/rd2, but not Nrl−/−;RPE65R91W/R91W, murine models of retinal degeneration. This confirms the occurrence of photoreceptor integration in certain models of retinal degeneration and demonstrates the importance of the host environment in determining transplantation outcome.


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2012

Modulation Of Gliosis Using shGFAP Or/and shvimentin To Determine Its Role In Photoreceptor Transplantation Efficiency

Claire Hippert; Amanda C. Barber; Anastasios Georgiadis; James W. Bainbridge; Alexander J. Smith; Jane C. Sowden; Robin R. Ali; Rachael A. Pearson


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2011

Retinal Repair In The Degenerating Retina: Assessing Photoreceptor Transplantation In Models Of Retinal Disease

Amanda C. Barber; Claire Hippert; Jane C. Sowden; Robin R. Ali; Rachael A. Pearson


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2012

Photoreceptor Transplantation In The Degenerating Retina: Breadth Of Application And Manipulation Of The Microenvironment To Enhance Efficiency

Amanda C. Barber; Claire Hippert; Yanai Duran; Emma L. West; Jorn Lakowski; James W. Bainbridge; Jane C. Sowden; Robin R. Ali; Rachael A. Pearson


Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science | 2012

Transplantation Of Es Cell-derived Retinal Cells Into The Adult Retina

Anai Gonzalez Cordero; Emma L. West; Claire Hippert; Yanai Duran; Rachael A. Pearson; Jane C. Sowden; Robin R. Ali

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Rachael A. Pearson

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Robin R. Ali

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Amanda C. Barber

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Jane C. Sowden

UCL Institute of Child Health

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Emma L. West

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Yanai Duran

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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James W. Bainbridge

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Alexander J. Smith

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Anai Gonzalez-Cordero

UCL Institute of Ophthalmology

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Anna B. Graca

University College London

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