Science - USA (2020-05-22)

(Antfer) #1
SCIENCE sciencemag.org

By John E. Dowling

S

urveys consistently report that peo-
ple fear total blindness more than
any other disability, and currently
the major cause of untreatable blind-
ness is retinal disease. The retina, a
part of the brain that extends into
the eye during development, initiates vi-
sion by first detecting light with the rod
and cone photoreceptors. Four classes of
retinal neurons then begin the analysis of
visual images. Defects in the optical me-
dia that transmit and focus light rays onto
the retina (lens and cornea) can usually be
dealt with surgically, although such treat-
ments are not available in some parts of the
world, resulting in as many as 20 to 30 mil-
lion legally blind individuals worldwide.
Untreatable retinal disease potentially
causes legal or total blindness in more
than 11 million people in the United
States alone, but progress in treatments
raises the possibility of restoring vision
in several types of retinal blindness ( 1 ).
Retinal neurons comprise bipolar and
horizontal cells, which are second-order
neurons that receive signals from the pho-
toreceptors in the outer retina. Third-order
amacrine and retinal ganglion cells are ac-
tivated in the inner retina by bipolar cells.
Axons from the ganglion cells form the op-
tic nerve and carry the visual message to the
rest of the brain (see the figure). The cells
most susceptible to blinding retinal disease
are the photoreceptors and ganglion cells.
Whereas progress has been made in com-
bating blindness caused by photoreceptor
degeneration, little can be done currently
to address ganglion cell loss, such as occurs
in glaucoma.
The approach that has been most suc-
cessful in restoring photoreceptor loss that
results in complete blindness is the use of
retinal prosthetic devices, with two now
approved for clinical use ( 2 ). These devices
electrically stimulate either bipolar or gan-
glion cells. They require goggles that have
a camera that converts visual stimuli into
electrical stimuli that activate the device,
which in turn stimulates the retinal cells.
Several hundred of these devices have

been implanted in blind or virtually blind
individuals, 70 to 80% of whom report im-
provement in quality of life. For those who
are completely blind, the ability to experi-
ence again at least some visual function is
viewed as a miracle.
There are substantial limitations to the
devices, however. The best visual acuity
attained so far is poor (20/500) and visual
field size is limited, but many improve-
ments, mainly technical, are being devel-
oped and tested, including the potential use
of electronic low-vision devices to increase
visual field size and acuity ( 3 ). Retinal pros-
theses are not useful for patients who are
blind because of loss of ganglion cells and/
or the optic nerve, but prostheses that by-
pass the retina and stimulate more central

visual structures, including the lateral ge-
niculate nucleus (the intermediary between
retina and cortex) and visual cortex, are
being developed and tested in humans ( 4 ).
There remain considerable technical issues,
but preliminary data indicate that such de-
vices are feasible.
A second approach to treat photorecep-
tor degeneration and potential blindness,
now in the clinic, is gene therapy ( 5 ). This
involves injecting a viral construct into
the eye that contains a normal gene to
replace an abnormal one. Success so far
has been limited to the treatment of Leber
congenital amaurosis (LCA) type 2, a rare
form of retinitis pigmentosa in which the
gene whose product is required to form the
correct isomer of vitamin A aldehyde, the
chromophore of the visual pigments, is mu-
tated. Little of the correct isomer is made
in LCA patients, resulting in substantial
loss of photoreceptor light sensitivity. This
is reversed when viral constructs encoding
the normal gene are injected deep into the
eye between the photoreceptors and pig-
ment epithelium.
Two factors make this approach feasible
in LCA: The genetic defect is monogenic,
and many of the photoreceptors in the pa-
tients remain alive, although compromised.
Thus, how broadly feasible gene therapy

will be for treating the enormous range of
inherited retinal diseases now known to ex-
ist (~300) remains to be seen. But at least a
dozen other gene therapy trials on mono-
genic inherited eye diseases similar to LCA
are under way ( 6 ). Other methods to ma-
nipulate genes are now available, including
CRISPR-mediated editing of retinal genes.
So far, the experiments have been mainly on
isolated cells or retinas, but these powerful
techniques are likely to have eventual clini-
cal applications.
A variation on the use of gene therapy
techniques is optogenetics, in which light-
sensitive molecules are introduced into
non- photosensitive retinal cells. This ap-
proach holds much promise for restoring
vision to totally blind individuals whose
photoreceptors have been lost. Using
viruses to insert genes encoding light-
sensitive molecules into bipolar and
ganglion cells, as well as surviving
photoreceptor cells that are no longer
photosensitive, has been accomplished
in animals and shown to restore some
vision ( 7 ). Again, technical issues remain:
The cells made light-sensitive require
bright light stimuli, and the light-sensitive
cells do not adapt. That is, whereas pho-
toreceptors normally allow vision over as
much as 10 log units of light intensity, the
cells made light-sensitive respond only to a
range of 2 to 3 log units. Various methods
to overcome these limitations are now be-
ing developed, and at least one clinical trial
is under way. Experiments to make cortical
neurons sensitive to light or other stimuli
that better penetrate the skull—magnetic
fields or ultrasound, for example—are also
being developed and tested in animals.
Other promising approaches to restore
vision are being explored. In cold-blooded
vertebrates, retinal cells (in fish) and even
the entire retina (in amphibians) can re-
generate endogenously after damage.
Regeneration of retinal cells in zebrafish is
now quite well understood ( 8 ). The regener-
ated neurons come from the major glial cell
in the retina, the Müller cell. After retinal
damage, Müller cells reenter the cell cycle
and divide asymmetrically to self-renew
and produce a progenitor cell that prolif-
erates to produce a pool of cells capable of
differentiating into new retinal cells that
repair the retina.
A number of transcription factors and

NEUROSCIENCE

Restoring vision to the blind


Ideas abound to restore vision to people blinded by retinal disease


Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, Harvard
University, Cambridge, MA 02138, USA. Email: dowling@
mcb.harvard.edu

“...progress in treatments raises the


possibility of restoring vision in several


types of retinal blindness .”


22 MAY 2020 • VOL 368 ISSUE 6493 827
Published by AAAS
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