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Dive into the research topics where Shannon M. Conley is active.

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Featured researches published by Shannon M. Conley.


The FASEB Journal | 2010

Gene delivery to mitotic and postmitotic photoreceptors via compacted DNA nanoparticles results in improved phenotype in a mouse model of retinitis pigmentosa

Xue Cai; Shannon M. Conley; Zack Nash; Steven J. Fliesler; Mark J. Cooper; Muna I. Naash

The purpose of the present study was to test the therapeutic efficiency and safety of compacted‐DNA nanoparticle‐mediated gene delivery into the subretinal space of a juvenile mouse model of retinitis pigmentosa. Nanoparticles containing the mouse opsin promoter and wild‐type mouse Rds gene were injected subretinally into mice carrying a haploinsufficiency mutation in the retinal degeneration slow (rds+/−) gene at postnatal day (P)5 and 22. Control mice were either injected with saline, injected with uncompacted naked plasmid DNA carrying the Rds gene, or remained untreated. Rds mRNA levels peaked at postinjection day 2 to 7 (PI‐2 to PI‐7) for P5 injections, stabilized at levels 2‐fold higher than in uninjected controls for both P5 and P22 injections, and remained elevated at the latest time point examined (PI‐120). Rod function (measured by electroretinography) showed modest but statistically significant improvement compared with controls after both P5 and P22 injections. Cone function in nanoparticle‐injected eyes reached wild‐type levels for both ages of injections, indicating full prevention of cone degeneration. Ultrastructural examination at PI‐120 revealed significant improvement in outer segment structures in P5 nanoparticle‐injected eyes, while P22 injection had a modest structural improvement. There was no evidence of macrophage activation or induction of IL‐6 or TNF‐α mRNA in P5 or P22 nanoparticle‐dosed eyes at either PI‐2 or PI‐30. Thus, compacted‐DNA nanoparticles can efficiently and safely drive gene expression in both mitotic and postmitotic photoreceptors and retard degeneration in this model. These findings, using a clinically relevant treatment paradigm, illustrate the potential for application of nanoparticle‐based gene replacement therapy for treatment of human retinal degenerations.—Cai, X., Conley, S. M., Nash, Z., Fliesler, S. J., Cooper, M. J., Naash, M. I. Gene delivery to mitotic and postmitotic photoreceptors via compacted DNA nanoparticles results in improved phenotype in a mouse model of retinitis pigmentosa. FASEB J. 24, 1178–1191 (2010). www.fasebj.org


PLOS ONE | 2009

A Partial Structural and Functional Rescue of a Retinitis Pigmentosa Model with Compacted DNA Nanoparticles

Xue Cai; Zack Nash; Shannon M. Conley; Steven J. Fliesler; Mark J. Cooper; Muna I. Naash

Previously we have shown that compacted DNA nanoparticles can drive high levels of transgene expression after subretinal injection in the mouse eye. Here we delivered compacted DNA nanoparticles containing a therapeutic gene to the retinas of a mouse model of retinitis pigmentosa. Nanoparticles containing the wild-type retinal degeneration slow (Rds) gene were injected into the subretinal space of rds+/− mice on postnatal day 5. Gene expression was sustained for up to four months at levels up to four times higher than in controls injected with saline or naked DNA. The nanoparticles were taken up into virtually all photoreceptors and mediated significant structural and biochemical rescue of the disease without histological or functional evidence of toxicity. Electroretinogram recordings showed that nanoparticle-mediated gene transfer restored cone function to a near-normal level in contrast to transfer of naked plasmid DNA. Rod function was also improved. These findings demonstrate that compacted DNA nanoparticles represent a viable option for development of gene-based interventions for ocular diseases and obviate major barriers commonly encountered with non-viral based therapies.


Journal of Clinical Investigation | 2012

DNA nanoparticle-mediated ABCA4 delivery rescues Stargardt dystrophy in mice

Zongchao Han; Shannon M. Conley; Rasha Makkia; Mark J. Cooper; Muna I. Naash

Mutations in the photoreceptor-specific flippase ABCA4 are associated with Stargardt disease and many other forms of retinal degeneration that currently lack curative therapies. Gene replacement is a logical strategy for ABCA4-associated disease, particularly given the current success of traditional viral-mediated gene delivery, such as with adeno-associated viral (AAV) vectors. However, the large size of the ABCA4 cDNA (6.8 kbp) has hampered progress in the development of genetic treatments. Nonviral DNA nanoparticles (NPs) can accommodate large genes, unlike traditional viral vectors, which have capacity limitations. We utilized an optimized DNA NP technology to subretinally deliver ABCA4 to Abca4-deficient mice. We detected persistent ABCA4 transgene expression for up to 8 months after injection and found marked correction of functional and structural Stargardt phenotypes, such as improved recovery of dark adaptation and reduced lipofuscin granules. These data suggest that DNA NPs may be an excellent, clinically relevant gene delivery approach for genes too large for traditional viral vectors.


Progress in Retinal and Eye Research | 2010

Nanoparticles for Retinal Gene Therapy

Shannon M. Conley; Muna I. Naash

Ocular gene therapy is becoming a well-established field. Viral gene therapies for the treatment of Lebers congentinal amaurosis (LCA) are in clinical trials, and many other gene therapy approaches are being rapidly developed for application to diverse ophthalmic pathologies. Of late, development of non-viral gene therapies has been an area of intense focus and one technology, polymer-compacted DNA nanoparticles, is especially promising. However, development of pharmaceutically and clinically viable therapeutics depends not only on having an effective and safe vector but also on a practical treatment strategy. Inherited retinal pathologies are caused by mutations in over 220 genes, some of which contain over 200 individual disease-causing mutations, which are individually very rare. This review will focus on both the progress and future of nanoparticles and also on what will be required to make them relevant ocular pharmaceutics.


Ophthalmic Genetics | 2009

RPE65: Role in the Visual Cycle, Human Retinal Disease, and Gene Therapy

Xue Cai; Shannon M. Conley; Muna I. Naash

RPE65 is an isomerohydrolase expressed in retinal pigment epithelium. It is critical for the regeneration of the visual pigment necessary for both rod and cone-mediated vision. Mutations in human RPE65 cause Lebers congenital amaurosis and other forms of autosomal recessive retinitis pigmentosa which are associated with early-onset blindness. Several RPE65 animal models including two different mouse models and a naturally occurring canine model have been thoroughly characterized to determine the mechanisms that underlie RPE65 associated retinal dystrophies. More recently, substantial effort has gone into designing gene therapies for these diseases. Based on several encouraging reports from animal models, at least three clinical trials are currently underway for the treatment of LCA using modified AAV vectors carrying the RPE65 cDNA and have reported positive preliminary results.


PLOS ONE | 2009

Ocular Delivery of Compacted DNA-Nanoparticles Does Not Elicit Toxicity in the Mouse Retina

Xi-Qin Ding; Alexander B. Quiambao; J. Browning Fitzgerald; Mark J. Cooper; Shannon M. Conley; Muna I. Naash

Subretinal delivery of polyethylene glycol-substituted lysine peptide (CK30PEG)-compacted DNA nanoparticles results in efficient gene expression in retinal cells. This work evaluates the ocular safety of compacted DNA nanoparticles. CK30PEG-compacted nanoparticles containing an EGFP expression plasmid were subretinally injected in adult mice (1 µl at 0.3, 1.0 and 3.0 µg/µl). Retinas were examined for signs of inflammation at 1, 2, 4 and 7 days post-injection. Neither infiltration of polymorphonuclear neutrophils or lymphocytes was detected in retinas. In addition, elevation of macrophage marker F4/80 or myeloid marker myeloperoxidase was not detected in the injected eyes. The chemokine KC mRNA increased 3–4 fold in eyes injected with either nanoparticles or saline at 1 day post-injection, but returned to control levels at 2 days post-injection. No elevation of KC protein was observed in these mice. The monocyte chemotactic protein-1, increased 3–4 fold at 1 day post-injection for both nanoparticle and saline injected eyes, but also returned to control levels at 2 days. No elevations of tumor necrosis factor alpha mRNA or protein were detected. These investigations show no signs of local inflammatory responses associated with subretinal injection of compacted DNA nanoparticles, indicating that the retina may be a suitable target for clinical nanoparticle-based interventions.


Biomaterials | 2013

A review of therapeutic prospects of non-viral gene therapy in the retinal pigment epithelium

Adarsha Koirala; Shannon M. Conley; Muna I. Naash

Ocular gene therapy has been extensively explored in recent years as a therapeutic avenue to target diseases of the cornea, retina and retinal pigment epithelium (RPE). Adeno-associated virus (AAV)-mediated gene therapy has shown promise in several RPE clinical trials but AAVs have limited payload capacity and potential immunogenicity. Traditionally however, non-viral alternatives have been plagued by low transfection efficiency, short-term expression and low expression levels. Recently, these drawbacks have begun to be overcome by the use of specialty carriers such as polylysine, liposomes, or polyethyleneimines, and by inclusion of suitable DNA elements to enhance gene expression and longevity. Recent advancements in the field have yielded non-viral vectors that have favorable safety profiles, lack immunogenicity, exhibit long-term elevated gene expression, and show efficient transfection in the retina and RPE, making them poised to transition to clinical applications. Here we discuss the advancements in nanotechnology and vector engineering that have improved the prospects for clinical application of non-viral gene therapy in the RPE.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2013

S/MAR-containing DNA nanoparticles promote persistent RPE gene expression and improvement in RPE65-associated LCA

Adarsha Koirala; Rasha Makkia; Shannon M. Conley; Mark J. Cooper; Muna I. Naash

Mutations in genes in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE) cause or contribute to debilitating ocular diseases, including Lebers congenital amaurosis (LCA). Genetic therapies, particularly adeno-associated viruses (AAVs), are a popular choice for monogenic diseases; however, the limited payload capacity of AAVs combined with the large number of retinal disease genes exceeding that capacity make the development of alternative delivery methods critical. Here, we test the ability of compacted DNA nanoparticles (NPs) containing a plasmid with a scaffold matrix attachment region (S/MAR) and vitelliform macular dystrophy 2 (VMD2) promoter to target the RPE, drive long-term, tissue-specific gene expression and mediate proof-of-principle rescue in the rpe65(-/-) model of LCA. We show that the S/MAR-containing plasmid exhibited reporter gene expression levels several fold higher than plasmid or NPs without S/MARs. Importantly, this expression was highly persistent, lasting up to 2 years (last timepoint studied). We therefore selected this plasmid for testing in the rpe65(-/-) mouse model and observe that NP or plasmid VMD2-hRPE65-S/MAR led to structural and functional improvements in the LCA disease phenotype. These results indicate that the non-viral delivery of hRPE65 vectors can result in persistent, therapeutically efficacious gene expression in the RPE.


Human Molecular Genetics | 2009

Differential requirements for retinal degeneration slow intermolecular disulfide-linked oligomerization in rods versus cones

Dibyendu Chakraborty; Xi-Qin Ding; Shannon M. Conley; Steven J. Fliesler; Muna I. Naash

It is commonly assumed that the ultrastructural organization of the rim region of outer segment (OS) discs in rods and lamellae in cones requires functional retinal degeneration slow/rod outer segment membrane protein 1 (Rds/Rom-1) complexes. Cysteine-150 (C150) in Rds has been implicated in intermolecular disulfide bonding essential for functional Rds complexes. Transgenic mice containing the Rds C150S mutation (C150S-Rds) failed to form higher-order Rds oligomers, although interactions between C150S-Rds and Rom-1 occurred in rods, but not in cones. C150S-Rds mice exhibited marked early-onset reductions in cone function and abnormal OS structure. In contrast, C150S-Rds expression in rods partly rescued the rds(+/-) phenotype. Although C150S-Rds was detected in the OSs in rods and cones, a substantial percentage of C150S-Rds and cone opsins were mislocalized to different cellular compartments in cones. The results of this study provide novel insights into the importance of C150 in Rds oligomerization and the differences in Rds requirements in rods versus cones. The apparent OS structural differences between rods and cones may cause cones to be more susceptible to the elimination of higher-order Rds/Rom-1 oligomers (e.g. as mediated by mutation of the Rds C150 residue).


PLOS ONE | 2012

Comparative Analysis of DNA Nanoparticles and AAVs for Ocular Gene Delivery

Zongchao Han; Shannon M. Conley; Rasha Makkia; Junjing Guo; Mark J. Cooper; Muna I. Naash

Gene therapy is a critical tool for the treatment of monogenic retinal diseases. However, the limited vector capacity of the current benchmark delivery strategy, adeno-associated virus (AAV), makes development of larger capacity alternatives, such as compacted DNA nanoparticles (NPs), critical. Here we conduct a side-by-side comparison of self-complementary AAV and CK30PEG NPs using matched ITR plasmids. We report that although AAVs are more efficient per vector genome (vg) than NPs, NPs can drive gene expression on a comparable scale and longevity to AAV. We show that subretinally injected NPs do not leave the eye while some of the AAV-injected animals exhibited vector DNA and GFP expression in the visual pathways of the brain from PI-60 onward. As a result, these NPs have the potential to become a successful alternative for ocular gene therapy, especially for the multitude of genes too large for AAV vectors.

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Muna I. Naash

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Michael W. Stuck

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Dibyendu Chakraborty

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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Zongchao Han

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Mark J. Cooper

Case Western Reserve University

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Xue Cai

University of Oklahoma

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Rahel Zulliger

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

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